PRECIOUS REMEDIES AGAINST SATAN'S Devices. OR, Salve for Believers and unbelievers Sores. Being a Companion for those that are in Christ, or out of Christ; That are high, or low, learned, or illiterate, staggering, or wandering; That slight, or neglect Ordinances, under a pretence of living above them; That are growing (in spirituals) or decaying; That are Tempted, or Deserted, afflicted, or Opposed; That have Assurance, or that want Assurance; That are Self-seekers, or the Commonwealth's Caterpillars; That are in love sweetly united, or that yet have their spirits too much embittered, etc. By THOMAS BROOKES, a willing Servant unto God, and the faith of his people, in the glorious Gospel of Christ, at Margaret's Fish-street hill. The Second Edition Corrected and Enlarged. Put on the whole Armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the Wiles of the Devil. Ephes. 6. 11. But unto you I say, and unto the rest in Thyatira, as many as have not this Doctrine, and which have not known the Depths of Satan, as they spoke, I will put upon you no other burden, but that which you have already, hold fast till I come, Rev. 2. 24, 25. LONDON: Printed by M. Simmons, for John Hancock at the first shop in Popes-head Alley, next to Cornhill. 1653. THE EPISTLE Dedicatory. TO HIS Most Dear and Precious Ones, The Sons and Daughters of the most High God, over whom the holy Ghost hath made him a Watchman. Beloved in our dearest Lord; CHrist, the Scripture, your own hearts, and Satan's Devices, are the four prime things that should be first and most studied & searched; if any cast off the study of these, they cannot be safe here, nor happy If a Minister had as many eyes as Argus, to watch; as many heads as Typheus' to dispose, and as many hands as Briareus to labour, he might find employment enough for them all. hereafter. 'Tis my work as a Christian, but much more as I am a watchman, to do my best, to discover the fullness of Christ, the emptiness of the creature, and the snares of the great Deceiver; which I have endeavoured to do (in the following discourse) according to that measure of grace, which I have received from the Lord. God once accepted a handful of meal for a sacrifice; and a gripe of Goat's hair for an oblation; and I know that you have not so learned the Father, as to despise the day of small things. Beloved, Satan being fallen from light to darkness, from felicity to misery, from Heaven to hell, from an Angel to a Devil, is so full of malice and envy, that he will leave no means unattempted, whereby he may make all others eternaly miserable with himself; he being shut out of Heaven, and shut up under chains of darkness till the judgement of the great day, makes use of all his power and skill, to bring all the sons of men into the same condition, and condemnation with himself. Satan hath cast such sinful seed into our souls, that now he can no sooner tempt, but we are ready to assent; he can no sooner have a plot upon us, but he makes a conquest of us; if he doth but show men a little of the beauty, and bravery of the world, how ready are they to fall down, and worship him. What ever sin the heart of man is most prone to, that the Devil will help forward. If David be proud of 2 Sam. 24. his people, Satan will provoke him to number them, that he may be yet prouder. If Peter be slavishly Matth. 16. ver. 22. 26. ch. 69. ult. fearful, Satan will put him upon rebuking and denying of Christ, to save his own skin. If Ahabs 1 Kings 22. Prophets be given to flatter, the Devil will straight way become a lying spirit in the mouths of four hundred of them, and they shall flatter Ahab to his ruin. If Judas will John 13. 2. be a Traitor, Satan will quickly enter into his heart, and make him sell his Master for money, which some Heathens would never have done. If Ananias will lie Acts 5. 3. for advantage, Satan will fill his heart that he may lie (with a witness) to the Holy Ghost. Satan loves to sail with the wind, and to suit men's temptations to their conditions, and inclinations; if they be in prosperity, he will tempt them to deny God; if they be in adversity, he will tempt them to distrust Prov. 30. v. 9 God; if their knowledge be weak, he will tempt them to have low thoughts of God; if their conscience be tender, he will tempt to scrupulosity; if large, to carnal security; if we be bold-spirited, he will tempt to presumption; if timorous, to desperation; if flexible, to inconstancy, if stiff, to impenitency, etc. From the power, malice, and skill of Satan, doth proceed all the soul killing plots, devices, stratagems, and machinations, that be in the world; Several devices he hath to draw souls to sin, and several plots he hath to keep souls from all holy, and heavenly services; and several stratagems he hath, to keep souls in a mourning, staggering, doubting, and questioning condition. He hath several devices, to destroy the great, and honourable, the wise, and learned; the blind, and ignorant; the rich, and the poor; the real, and the nominal Saints, etc. One while he will refrain from tempting, that we may think ourselves secure, and neglect our watch; another while he will seem to fly, that he may make us proud of the victory; one while he will fix men's eyes more on others sins, than their own, that he may puff them; another while he will fix their eyes more on others graces then their own, that he may overwhelm them etc. A man may as well tell the stars, and number the sands of the sea, as reckon up all the devices of Satan; yet those which are most considerable, and by which he doth most mischief to the precious souls of men, are in the following Treatise discovered, and the Remedies against them prescribed, etc. Beloved, I think it necessary to give you, and the world a faithful account of the Reasons, moving me to appear in Print, in these days, wherein we may say there was never more writing, and yet neverlesse practising, and they are these that follow, etc. First, because Satan hath a 1. Reason. greater influence upon men, and higher advantages over men (having the wind and the hill as it were) than they think he hath, and the knowledge of his high advantages is the high way to disappoint him, and to render the soul strong in resisting, and happy in conquering, etc. Your importunity, and the importunity 2. Reason. of many other precious sons of Zion hath after much striving with God, my own heart, and others, made a conquest of me and forced me to do that at last, which at first was not a little contrary to my inclination, and resolution, etc. The strange opposition that I 3. Reason. Pirates make the strongest and the hottest oppositions against those vessels that are most richly laden; so doth Satan that arch Pirate against those truths, that have most of God, Christ, and Heaven in them. met with from Satan, in the study of this following discourse, hath put an edge upon my spirit, knowing that Satan strives mightily, to keep those things from seeing the light, that tend eminently to shake and break his Kingdom of darkness, and to lift up the Kingdom and glory of the Lord Jesus Christ, in the souls and lives of the children of men, etc. Its exceeding usefulness to all sorts, ranks, and conditions of men 4. Reason. in the world; here you have salve for every sore, and a plaster for every wound, and a Remedy against every disease; especially against those, that tend most to the undoing of souls, and to the ruin of the State, etc. I know not of any one, or 5. Reason. other that have writ of this Subject; all that I have ever seen, have only touched upon this string, which hath been no small provocation to me, to attempt to do something this way, that others, that have better heads and hearts, may be the more stirred to improve their Talents, in a further discovery of Satan's Devices, and in the making known of such choice Remedies, as may enable the souls of men to triumph over all his plots and stratagems, etc. I have many precious friends in 6 Reason. several Countries, who are not a little desirous, that my pen may reach them, now my voice cannot. I have formerly been, by the help of the mighty God of Jacob, a weak instrument of good to them, and cannot but hope, and believe, that the Lord will also bless these labours to them, they being (in part) the fruit of their desires, and prayers, etc. Lastly, not knowing how soon 7. Reason. my Glass may be out, and how soon I may be cut off by a hand of death, from all opportunities of doing further service for Christ, or your souls in this world, I was willing to sow a little handful of spiritual seed among you; that so, when I put off this earthly Tabernacle, my love to you, and that dear remembrance of you, which I have in my soul, may strongly engage your minds and spirits, to make this Book your Companion; and under all external, or internal changes, to make use of this heavenly Salve, which I hope, will by the blessing of the Lord, be as effectual for the healing of all your Wounds, as their looking up to the brazen Serpent, was effectual to heal theirs that were bit, and stung with fiery Serpents. I shall leave this Book with you, as a Legacy of my dearest Love, desiring the Lord to make it a far greater, and sweeter Legacy, than all those carnal Legacies are, that are left by the high and mighty ones of the earth, to their nearest and dearest relations, etc. Beloved, I would not have affection carry my pen too much beyond my intention; therefore only give me leave to signify my desires for you, and my desires to you; and I shall draw to a close. My desires for you are, That he would grant you according to the riches Ephes. 3. of his glory, to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner Vers. 17. man. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith, that ye being rooted and grounded in love; May be able to Vers. 18. comprehend with all Saints, what is the breadth, and length, and depth, Vers. 19 and height: And to know the love of Christ that passeth knowledge; That ye might be filled with all the fullness of God. And that ye might walk Colos. 1. 10. worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increased in the knowledge of God, Strengthened with all might, according Vers. 11. to his glorious power, unto all patience, and long-suffering with joyfulness. That ye do no evil. That 2 Cor. 13. 7. your love may abound yet more and more in Knowledge, and in all Judgement. Phil. 1. 9 That ye may approve things that are excellent, that ye may be sincere, Vers. 10. and without offence till the day of Christ. And that our God would 2 Thess. 1. 11. count you worthy of this calling, and fulfil all the good pleasure of his goodness, and the work of Faith with Vers. 12. power. That the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you, and ye in him, according to the grace of our God, and the Lord Jesus Christ. And that you may be eminent in Psal. 93. 5. Sanctity; Sanctity being Zions' glory, that your hearts may be kept upright, your judgements sound, and your lives unblamable. That as you are now my joy, so in the day of Christ you may be my Crown; That I may see my labours in your lives, that your conversation may not be earthly, when the things you hear are heavenly; but that it may be as becomes the Gospel. That as the Fishes which live in the salt Sea, yet are fresh; so you, though you live in an uncharitable world, may yet be charitable and loving. That ye may like the Bee, suck Honey out of every Flower; That ye may shine in a sea of troubles, as the Pearl shines in the sky, though it grows in the Sea; That in all your trials you may be like the stone in Thracia, that neither burneth in the fire, nor sinketh in the water. That ye may be like the Heavens, excellent in substance, and beautiful in appearance; that so you may meet me with joy, in that day, wherein Christ shall say to his Father, Lo, here am I, and the children that thou hast given me. My desires to you are, That you would make it your business to study Christ, his Word, your own Hearts, Satan's Plots, and Eternity, more than ever; that ye would endeavour more to be inwardly sincere, then outwardly glorious; to live, then to have a name to live. That ye would labour with all your might, to be thankful under Mercies, and faithful in your Places, and humble under Divine Appearances, and fruitful under precious Ordinances; that as your means and mercies are greater than others, so your account before God may not prove worse than others. That ye would pray for me, who am not worthy to be named among the Saints, that I may be a precious instrument in the hand of Christ, to bring in many souls unto him, and to build up those that are brought in, in their most holy Faith; And that Utterance may be given to me, that I may make known all the will of God. That 2 Cor. 11. 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28. I may be sincere, faithful, frequent, fervent, and constant in the work of the Lord, and that my labour be not in vain in the Lord; That my Labours may be accepted of the Lord, and his Saints, and I may daily see the travel of my soul, etc. But above all, pray for me, that I may more and more find the power, and sweet of those things upon my own heart, that I give out to you and others; and that my soul be so visited with strength from on high, that I may live up fully, and constantly to those truths that I hold forth to the world; and that I may be both in Life and Doctrine, a burning and a shining light; That so, when the Lord Jesus shall appear, I may receive a crown of glory, which he shall give to me in that day, and not only to me, but to all that love his appearing, etc. For a close, remember this, that your life is short, your duties many, your assistance great, and your reward sure; therefore faint not, hold on, and hold up in ways of well doing, and Heaven shall make amends for all. I shall now take leave of you, when my heart hath by my hand subscribed that I am, Your loving Pastor under Christ, according to all Pastor all affections, and engagements in our dearest Lord. THOMAS BROOKS. A WORD TO THE READER. Dear Friend! SOLOMON bids us buy the Pro. 23. 23 Truth, but doth not tell us what it must cost, because we must get it, though it be never so dear; we must love it both Multi amā● veritatem lucentem, o derunt redarguentem. shining and scorching; every parcel of Truth is precious, as the filings of gold; we must either live with it, or die for it; As Ruth said to Naomi, Wither thou goest, I will go, and Ruth 1. 16, 17. where thou lodgest, I will lodge, and nothing but death shall part thee and me; So must gracious spirits say, where Truth goes, I will go, and where Truth lodges, I will Si veritas est causa discordiae, mori possum tacere con possum. J●rome. lodge, and nothing but death shall part me and Truth. A man may lawfully sell his House, Lands, and Jewels, but Truth is a Jewel that exceeds all price, and must not be sold. 'Tis our Heritage; Thy Testimonies have I taken Psal. 119. 11●. as an Heritage for ever; 'tis a Legacy that our forefathers have hought with their bloods, which should make us willing to lay down any thing, and to lay out any thing, that we may with the wise Merchant in the Gospel, purchase this precious Pearl, M●t. 5. 18. Verit●s vin●it. Truth at last triumphs. which is more worth than Heaven and Earth, and which will make a man live happily, die comfortably, and reign eternally. And now if thou pleasest, read the Work, and receive this council from me. First, Thou must know that every man cannot be excellent, that yet may be useful. An iron key may unlock the door of a golden treasure, yea (ferrum potest quod aurum non potest) Iron can do some things that gold cannot, etc. Secondly, Remember, 'tis not hasty reading, but serious meditating upon 'Tis a Law among the Persees in India, to use premeditation in what they are to do, that if it be bad, to reject it, if good, to act it. holy, and heavenly truths, that makes them prove sweet and profitable to the soul. 'Tis not the Bees touching of the Flower that gathers Honey, but her abiding for a time upon the Flower, that draws out the sweet. 'Tis not he that reads most, but he that meditates most, that will prove the choicest, sweetest, wisest, and strongest Christian, etc. Thirdly, Know, that 'tis not the knowing, nor the talking, nor the reading man, but the doing man, that at last will be found the happiest man; If you know these things, blessed John 15. 14. Mat. 7. 21. and happy are you, if you do them. Not every one that saith Lord, Lord, shall enter into the 'Twas a good saying of Justin Martyr, Non in verbis sed in factis res nostrae religioni● consistunt. Kingdom of Heaven, but he that doth the will of my Father that is in Heaven. Judas called Christ Lord, Lord, and yet betrayed him, and is gone to his place; ah! How many Judasses' have we in these days, that kiss Christ, and yet betray Christ; That in their words profess him, but in their works deny him; that bow The Heathen Philosopher (Seneca) liked not such that are (semper victuri) always about to live better, but never begin. God loves (saith Luther) currist●●, not qu●ristas, the ●unner not the questioner Pacunius hath an elegant saying, I hate (saith he) the men that are idle in deed and philosophical in word, etc. their knee to him, and yet in their hearts despise him; that call him Jesus, and yet will not obey him for their Lord. Reader, If it be not strong upon thy heart, to practise what thou readest, to what end dost thou read, to increase thy own condemnation? If thy light and knowledge be not turned into practice, the more knowing man thou art, the more miserable man thou wilt be in the day of recompense; thy light and knowledge will more torment thee, than all the Devils in hell. Thy knowledge will be that rod that will eternally lash thee, and that Scorpion that will for ever by't thee, and that worm that will everlastingly gnaw thee; therefore read, and labour to know, that thou mayest do, or else thou art undone for ever. When Demosthenes was asked what was the first part of an Orator, what the second, what the third; he answered, action; the same may I say, if any should ask me, what is the first, the second, the third part of a Christian? I must answer, action; as that man that reads that he may know; and that labours to know, that he may do, will have two Heavens; a Heaven of Joy, Peace, and Comfort on earth, and a Heaven of glory, and happiness after death. Fourthly, and lastly, if in thy reading thou wilt cast a serious eye upon the Margin, thou wilt find many sweet and precious Notes, that will oftentimes give light to the things thou readest, and pay thee for thy pains, with much comfort, and profit; So desiring that thou mayest find as much sweetness, and advantage in reading this Treatise, as I have found (by the overshadowings of Heaven) in the studying and writing of it, I commend thee to God, and to the word of his grace, which is able to Acts 20. 32. build thee up, and to give thee an inheritance among them which are sanctified. And rest Reader, Thy soul's Servant in every office of the Gospel, THOMAS BROOKS. PRECIOUS REMEDIES AGAINST SATAN'S Devices. 2 CORINTH. 2. 11. Lest Satan should get an advantage of us: for we are not ignorant of his Devices. IN the fifth Verse, the Apostle shows, that the incestuous person had by his incest, sadded those precious souls that God would not have sadded; souls that walk sinfully are hazael's to the godly, and draw many sighs and tears from them; Jeremy weeps in secret for Judah's sins, and Paul cannot speak of those Belly▪ Gods with dry eyes, Phil. 3. 18. And Lots righteous soul was burdened, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. vexed, and racked by the filthy Sodomites, 2 Pet. 2. 7, 8. Every sinful Sodomite was a Hazael to his eyes, a Hadadrimmon to his heart; Gracious souls use to mourn for other men's sins as well as their own, and for their souls 119 Psal. 136. 158. and sins, who make a mock of sin, and a jest of damning their own soul●. Gild or grief is all that gracious souls get by communion with vain souls. In the sixth Verse, he shows, that the punishment that was inflicted upon the incestuous person was sufficient, and therefore they should not refuse to receive him, who had repent, and sorrowed for his former faults and follies. 'Tis not for the honour of Christ, the credit of the Gospel, nor the good of souls, for Professors to be like those Act. and Mon. sol. 1392. bloody wretches, that burned some that recanted at the stake, saying that they would send them out of the world while they were in a good mind. In the 7, 8, 9, and 10 Verses, the Apostle stirs up the Church to forgive him, to comfort him, and to confirm their love towards him, lest he should be swallowed up with over much sorrow, Satan going about to mix the detestable darnel of desperation with the godly sorrow of a pure penitent heart. It was a sweet saying of one, Let a man Doleat & de dolore gaudeat, Jerome. grieve for his sin, and then joy for his grief; that sorrow for sin that keeps the soul from looking towards the Mercy-seat, and that keeps Christ and the soul asunder, or that shall render the soul unfit for the communion of Saints, is a sinful sorrow. In the eleventh Verse, he lays down another reason to work them to show pity and mercy to the penitent sinner, that was mourning and groaning under his sin and misery, i. e. Lest Satan should get an advantage of us: for we are not ignorant of his Devices. A little for the opening of the words. Lest Satan should get an advantage of us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. lest Satan overreach us, the Greek word signifieth to have more than belongs to one; the comparison is taken from the greedy Merchant, that seeketh and taketh all opportunities to beguile and deceive others. Satan is that wily Merchant, that devoureth not widow's houses, but most men's souls. For we are not ignorant of Satan's devices, or plots, or machinations, or stratagems; Non 〈…〉. he is but a titular Christian, that hath not personal experience of Satan's stratagems, his set and composed machinations, his artificially-moulded methods, his plots, darts, depths, whereby he out-witted our first parents, and fits us a pennyworth still, as he sees reason. The main Observation that I shall draw from these words, is this. That Satan hath his several devices to deceive, entangle, and undo the souls of men. I shall first prove the point, and secondly show you his several Devices; and thirdly the Remedies against his Devices; and fourthly, how it comes to pass, that he hath so many several Devices to deceive, entangle, and undo the souls of men. Fifthly, I shall lay down some Propositions concerning Satan, and his Devices. For the proof of the point, take these few Scriptures. Ephes. 6. ver. 11. Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the Devil. The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. that is here rendered wiles, is a notable emphatical word. 1. It signifies such snares as are laid behind one, such treacheries as come upon one's back at unawares. It notes the methods, or waylayings of that old subtle Serpent, who, like Pan's adder in the path, biteth the heels of passengers, and thereby transfuseth his venom to the head and heart; the word signifies an ambushment, or stratagem of War, whereby the enemy sets upon a man ex ins●diis, at unawares. 2. It signifies such snares as are set to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. catch one in ones road; a man walks in his road, and thinks not of it, on the sudden he is Catcht by thiefs, or falls into a pit, etc. 3. It signifies such as are purposely, artificially, and craftily set for the taking the prey at the greatest advantage that can be; the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifies properly a waylay, circumvention, or going about, as they do which seek after their prey. Julian by his craft, drew more from the Faith, than all his persecuting Predecessors could do by their cruelty. So doth Satan more hurt in his sheepskin, then by roaring like a Lyon. Take one Scripture more for the proof of the point, and that is in the second of Timothy, the second chapter, and the last verse, And that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil, who are taken captive by him at his will. The Greek word that is here rendered recover themselves, signifies to awake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. themselves. The Apostle alludeth to one that is asleep, or drunk, who is to be awaked and restored to his senses; and the Greek word that is here rendered taken captive, signifies to be taken alive; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is, properly, a warlike word, and signifies to be taken alive, as Soldiers are taken alive in the wars, or as Birds are taken alive, and ensnared in the Fowler's net. Satan hath snares for the wise, and snares for the simple, snares for Hypocrites, and snares for the upright; snares for generous souls, and snares for timorous souls, snares for the rich, and snares for the poor, snares for the aged, and snares for youth, etc. happy are those souls that are not taken and held in the snares that he hath laid. Take one proof more, and then I will proceed to the opening of the Point, and that is in the 2d Revelations, and the 24. v. But unto you I say, and unto the rest in Thyatira, as many as have not Pareus in loc. 1 Tim. 4. 1. this Doctrine, and which have not known the depths of Satan, as they speak, I will put upon you no other burden, but to hold fast till I come. Those poor souls called their opinions the depths of God, when indeed they were the depths of Satan; you call your opinions depths, and so they are, but they are such depths as Satan hath brought out of Hell, they are the whisper and hissings of that Serpent, not the inspirations of God. Now the second thing that I am to show you, is his several Devices, and herein I shall first show you the several Devices that he hath to draw the soul to sin; I shall instance in these twelve, which may bespeak our most serious consideration. His first Device to draw the soul to 1 Device. sin, is to present the bait, and hid the hook; to present the golden cup, and hid the poison; to present the sweet, the pleasure, and the profit that may flow in upon the soul, by yielding to sin, and by hiding from the soul the wrath and misery that will certainly follow the committings of sin. By this Device he took our first Parents, Genesis 3. 4, 5. And the Serpent said unto the woman, ye shall not surely die. For God doth So to reduce D. Taylor Martyr, they promised him not only his pardon, but a Bishopric. Act. and Mon. folio 1386. Inest peccatum cum delectaris: regnat si consent ser●. August in Psal. 50. know, that in the day ye▪ eat thereof, than your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as Gods, knowing good and evil. Your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as Gods, here is the bait, the sweet, the pleasure, the profit, Oh! but he hides the hook, the shame, the wrath, and the loss that would certainly follow. There is an opening of the eyes of the mind to contemplation and joy, and there is an opening of the eyes of the body to shame and confusion. He promiseth them the former, but intends the latter, and so cheats them, giving them an Apple in exchange for Paradise, as he deals by thousands now adays. Satan with ease puts fallacies upon us, and then, by his golden baits, leads us, and leaves us in a fools Paradise; he promises the soul honour, pleasure and profit, etc. but pays the soul with the greatest contempt, shame, and loss that can be; by a golden bait he laboured to catch Christ This world at last shall be burnt for a witch, sayeth one. Multi amando res noxias sunt miseri, habendo miseriores. August. in Psa. 26. Many are miserable by loving hurtful things, but they are more miserable by having them. Men had need pray with Bernard, Da domine ut sic possideamus tempora lia ut non perdamus aeterna. Grant us Lord that we may so partake of temporal felicity, that we may not lose eternal. in the 4 of Mat. 8. 9 he shows him the beauty and the bravery of a bewitching world, which doubtless would have taken many a carnal heart; but here the devil's fire fell upon wet tinder, & therefore took not; these tempting objects did not at all win upon his affections, nor dazzle his eyes; though many have eternally died of the wound of the eye, and fallen for ever by this vile Strumpet the world, who by laying forth her two fair breasts of profit and pleasure, hath wounded their souls, and cast them down into utter perdition; she hath by the glistering of her pomp and preferment, slain millions, as the Serpent Scytale, which when she cannot overtake the fleeing passengers, doth, with her beautiful colours, astonish and amaze them: so that they have no power to pass away, till she have stung them to death. Adversity hath slain her thousand, but prosperity her ten thousand. Now the Remedies against this Device of the Devil, are these. FIrst, keep at the greatest distance from 1 Remedy. sin, and from playing with the golden bait that Satan holds forth to catch you; for this you have the 12 Rom. 9 v. Abhor that which is evil, cleave to that which is good; when we meet with any thing extremely evil, and contrary to us, nature abhors it, and retires as far as it can 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The simple verb imports extreme detestation, which is aggravated by the composition. Chrysost. from it. The Greek word that is there rendered abhor, is very significant, it signifies to hate it as Hell itself, to hate it with horror. Anselm used to say, that if he should see the shame of sin on the one hand, and the pains of hell on the other, and must of necessity choose one, he would rather be thrust into Hell without sin, then go into Heaven with sin: so great was his hatred and detestation of sin. 'Tis our wisest and our safest Prov. 5. 8. 1 Thess. 5. 22. course to stand at the furthest distance from sin, not to go near the house of the Harlot; but to fly from all appearance of evil; the best course to prevent falling into the pit, is to keep at the It was a divine saying of a Heathen, that if there were no God to punish him, no Devil to torment him, no Hell to burn him no man to see him; yet would he not sin ser the ugliness and filthiness of sin, and the grief of his own Conscience. Seneca. greatest distance; he that will be so bold as to attempt to dance upon the brink of the pit, may find by woeful experience, that 'tis a righteous thing with God, that he should fall into the pit. Joseph keeps at a (distance from sin, and from playing with Satan's golden baits, and stands; David draws near, and plays with the bait, and falls, and swallows bait and hook with a witness. David comes near the snare, and is taken in it, to the breaking of his bones, the wounding of his conscience, and the loss of his God. Sin is a plague, yea the greatest and the most infectious plague in the world, and yet, ah how few are there that tremble at it? that keep at a distance from it, 1 Cor. 5. 6. Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump? As soon as one sin had seized upon Adam's heart, all sin entered into his soul and overspread Sin is like those Diseases that are called by Physicians, Corruptio totius substantiae. it. How hath Adam's one sin spread over all mankind. 5. Rom. 12. ver. Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin: and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned. Ah! how doth the Father's sin infect the child, the Husbands infect the Wife, the Masters the Servant? The sin that is in one man's heart, is able to infect a whole world, 'tis of such a spreading and infectious nature. The story of the Italian, who first made his enemy deny God, and then stabbed him, and so at once murdered both body and soul, declares the perfect malignity of sin; and Oh! that what hath been spoken upon this head▪ may prevail with you, to stand at a distance from sin. The second Remedy, is, to consider 2 Remedy. When the golden bait is cast forth to catch us, we must say as Demosthenes the Orator did, of the beautiful Lais, when he was asked an excessive sum of money to behold her; I will not buy repentance so dear, I am not so ill a merchant as to seleternals for temporals. that sin is but a bitter-sweet; that seeming sweet that is in sin will quickly vanish, and lasting shame, sorrow, horror, and terror will come in the room thereof. 20. Job 12, 13, 14. Though wickedness be sweet in his mouth, though he bide it under his tongue, though he spare it, and forsake it not, but keep it still within his mouth, yet his meat in his bowels is turned, it is the gall of Asps within him. Forbidden profits and pleasures are most pleasing to vain men, who count madness mirth, etc. Many long to be meddling with the murdering morsels of sin, which nourish not but rent and consume the belly, the soul that receives them. Many eat that on earth, that they digest in hell; sins murdering morsels will deceive those that devour them. Adam's If intemperance cou●d afford more pleasure than temperance, Heliogobalus should have been more happy than Adam in Paradise. Apple was a bitter-sweet; Escus mess was a bitter-sweet; the Israelites quails a bitter-sweet, Jonathans' honey a bitter-sweet, and Adonijahs dainties a bitter-sweet; after the meal is ended comes the reckoning: Men must not think to dance and dine with the Devil, and then to sup with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven: to feed upon the poison of Asps, and yet that the Viper's tongue shall not slay them; when the Asp stings a man, it doth first tickle him so, as it makes him laugh, till the poison by little and Plutark. little gets to the heart, and then it pains him more than ever it delighted him: so doth sin, it may please a little at first, but it will pain the soul with a witness at last; yea, if there were the least real delight in sin, there could be no perfect Hell where men shall most perfectly be tormented with their sin. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan is, solemnly to consider, that sin will usher in the greatest and the Isa. 59 2. Psal. 51. 12. Isa. 59 8. 2 Chron. 15. 3, 4. Jer. 17. 18. saddest losses that can be upon our souls; it will usher in the loss of that Divine favour that is better than life, and the loss of that joy that is unspeakable, and full of glory, and the loss of that peace that passeth understanding, and the loss of those Divine influences, by which the soul hath been refreshed, quickened, Jer. 5. 25. raised, strengthened, and gladded, and the loss of many outward desirable mercies, which otherwise the soul might have enjoyed. It was a sound and savoury reply of an English Captain at the loss of Calais, when a proud Frenchman scornfully demanded, when will you fetch Calais again? replied, * Quando peccata vestra, erunt nostris graviera. When your sins shall weigh down ours; ah England! my constant Prayer for thee is, that thou mayest not sin away thy mercies into their hands, that cannot call mercy mercy, and that would joy in nothing more than to see thy sorrow and misery, and to see that hand to make thee naked, that hath clothed thee with much mercy and glory. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. In Sardis there grew an herb called Appium Sardis that would ' make a man lie laughing when he was deadly sick-such is the operation of sin. of Satan, is seriously to consider, that sin is of a very deceitful and bewitching nature, sin is from the greatest deceiver; 'tis a child of his own begetting, 'tis the ground of all the deceit in the world, and 'tis in its own nature exceeding deceitful. Heb. 3. 13. But exhort one another daily, while it is called to day, lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin; it will kiss the soul, and pretend fair to the soul, and yet betray the soul for ever; it will with Dalilah smile upon us, that it may betray us into the hands of the Devil, as she did Samson into the hands of the Pro. 5. 22, 23. Philistimes; sin gives Satan a power over us, and an advantage to accuse us, and to lay claim to us, as those that wear his badge; 'tis of a very bewitching nature, it bewitches the soul where 'tis upon the throne, that the soul cannot leave it, though it perish eternally by it. Sin so bewitches the soul, that it makes Which occasioned Chrysost●me to say, when Eudoxia the Empress threatened him, Go tell her (Nile nisi pr●●atum ti 〈…〉) I fear nothing but sin. the soul call evil good, and good evil, bitter sweet, and sweet bitter, light darkness, and darkness light; and a soul thus bewitched with sin will stand it out to the death, at the swords point with God; Let God strike, and wound, and cut to the very bone, yet the bewitched soul cares not, fears not, but will still hold on in a course of wickedness, as you may see in Pharaoh, Balaam, and Judas; tell the bewitched soul that sin is a Viper that will certainly kill when 'tis not killed; that sin often kills secretly, insensibly, eternally, yet the bewitched soul cannot, nor will not cease from sin. When the Physicians told 〈…〉 nen 〈◊〉 Ambrose. Ambrose. Theotimus that except he did abstain from drunkenness, and uncleanness, etc. he would lose his eyes, his heart was so bewitched to his sins, that he answers, Then farewell sweet light; he had rather lose his eyes then leave his sins: So a man bewitched with sin, had rather lose God, Christ, Heaven, and his own soul, than part with his sin; O therefore for ever take heed of playing, or nibbling at Satan's golden baits. The second Device of Satan to draw 2 Device. the soul to sin, is, by painting sin with virtue's colours; Satan knows, that if h● should present sin in its own nature and dress, the soul would rather fly from it, then yield to it, and therefore he presents it unto us, not in its own proper colours, but painted and guilded over with the name and show of virtue, that we may the more easily be overcome by it, and take the more pleasure in committing of it. Pride, he presents to the soul under the name and notion of neatness, and cleanliness; and covetousness (which the Apostle condemns for idolatry) to be but good husbandry, and drunkenness to be good fellowship, and riotousness under the name and notion of liberality, and wantonness as a trick of youth, etc. Now the Remedies against this Device of Satan are these. FIrst, Consider that sin is never a whit 1 Remedy. the less filthy, vild, and abominable, by its being coloured and painted with virtue's colours. A poisonous Pill is never a whit the less poisonous, because 'tis gilded over with gold; nor a Wolf is never a whit the less a Wolf, because he hath put on a sheeps-skin; nor the Devil is never a whit the less a Devil, because he appears sometimes like an Angel of light, so neither is sin any whit the less filthy, and abominable, by its being painted over with virtue's colours. The second Remedy is this, That the 2 Remedy. more sin is painted forth under the colour Turpiora sunt vitia quae virtutum specie celantur, Jerome. Thus the Illuminates (as they called themselves) a pestilent Sect in Arragon, professing and affecting in themselves a kind of Angelical purity, fell suddenly to the justifying of beastiality, as many have done in these days. of virtue, the more dangerous 'tis to the souls of men; this we see evident in these days, by those very many souls that are turned out of the way that is holy, (and in which their souls have had sweet and glorious communion with God) into ways of highest vanity and folly, by Satan's neat colouring over of sin, and painting forth vice under the name and colour of virtue; this is so notoriously known, that I need but name it; the most dangerous vermin is too often to be found under the fairest and sweetest Flowers, and the fairest glove is often drawn upon the foulest hand, and the richest robes are often put upon the filthiest bodies: so are the fairest and the sweetest names upon the greatest, and the most horriblest vices and etrors that be in the world; ah! that we had not too many sad proofs of this amongst us. The third Remedy against this Device, 3 Remedy. is to look on sin with that eye, Tacitus speaks of Tiberius. ●hat when his sins did appear in their own colours, they did so terrify and torment him, that he protested to the Senate, that he suffered death daily. which within a few hours we shall see it; ah souls! when you shall lie upon a dying bed, and stand before a judgement seat, sin shall be unmasked, and its dress and robes shall then be taken off, and then it shall appear more vile, filthy, and terrible than Hell itself; then that which formerly appeared most sweet, will appear most bitter, and that which appeared most beautiful, will appear most ugly, and that which appeared most delightful, will then appear most dreadful to the soul; ah! the shame, the pain, the gall, the bitterness, the horror, the hell, that the fight of sin, when its dress is taken off, will raise in poor souls. Sin will surely prove evil, and bitter to the soul, when its robes are taken off. A man may have the Stone, who feels no fit of it. Conscience will work at last, though for the present one may feel no fit of accusation, Laban Satan that now allures thee to sin, will ere long make thee see, that (Peccatum est deicidium) sin is a murdering of God, and this will make thee murder two at once, thy soul and thy body, unless the Lord in mercy holds thy hand. shown himself at parting; sin will be bitterness in the latter end, when it shall appear to the soul in its own filthy nature. The Devil deals with men, as the Panther doth with Beasts, he hides his deformed head, till his sweet scent hath drawn them into his danger; till we have sinned, Satan is a Parasite, when we have sinned, he is a Tyrant. Ah souls! the day is at hand, when the Devil will pull off the paint and garnish that he hath put upon sin, and present that monster sin in such a monstrous shape to your souls, that will cause your thoughts to be be troubled, your countenance to be changed, the joints of your loins to be loosed, and your knees to be dashed one against another, and your hearts to be so terrified, that you will be ready with Achitophel, and Judas, to strangle, and hang your bodies on earth, and your souls in Hell; if the Lord hath not more mercy on you, than he had on them; oh! therefore look upon sin now, as you must look upon it to all eternity, and as God, Conscience, and Satan will present it to you another day. The fourth Remedy against this device 4. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that even these very sins, that Satan paints, and puts new names and colours V●a guttula plus valet quam coelum & terra Luther i. e. one little drop (speaking of the blood of Christ) is more worth than Heaven and Earth. upon, cost the best blood, the noblest blood, the life-blood, the heartblood of the Lord Jesus; that Christ should come from the eternal bosom of his Father to a Region of sorrow, and death; that God should be manifested in the flesh, the Creator made a Creature; that he that was clothed with glory should be wrapped with rags of flesh; he that filled heaven and earth with his glory, should be cradled in a manger; that the power of God should fly from weak man, the God of Israel into Egypt; that the God of the Law should be subject to the Law; One of the Rabbins, when he read what bitter torments the Messiah should suffer, when he came into the world, cried out Veniat Messiah at ego non videam i. e. Let the Messiah come, but let not me see him. Dionysius being in Egypt at the time of Christ's suffering, and seeing an Eclipse of the Sun, and knowing it to be contrary to nature, cried out (aut Deus naturae patitur aut mundi machina dissolvitur) Either the God of Nature suffered, or the frame of the world will be dlssolved. the God of Circumcision circumcised; the God that made the Heavens working at joseph's homely trade; that he that binds the Devils in chains should be tempted; that he whose is the world, and the fullness thereof, should hunger and thirst; that the God of strength should be weary, the Judge of all flesh condemned, the God of life put to death; that he that is one with his Father, should cry out of misery, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me; that he that had the keys of Hell and death at his girdle, should lie imprisoned in the sepulchre of another, having in his life time, no where to lay his head, nor after death, to lay his body; that that head, before which the Angels do cast down their Crowns, should be crowned with thorns; and those eyes, purer than the Sun, put out by the darkness of death; those ears, which hear nothing but Hallelujahs of Saints and Angels, to hear the blasphemies of the multitude; that face, that was fairer than the Sons of men, to be spit on by those beastly wretched Jews; that mouth and tongue, that spoke as never man spoke, accused for blasphemy; those hands that freely swayed the Sceptre of Heaven, nailed to the Cross; those feet like unto fine brass, nailed to the Cross for man's sins; each sense annoyed, his feeling, or touching with a spear and nails; 'Tis an excellent saying of Bernard (quanto pro nobis vilior tanto nobis charior) the more vild Christ made himself for us, the more dear he ought to be to us. his smell with stinking savour, being crucified about Golgatha, the place of Skulls; his taste with vinegar and gall; his hearing with reproaches; and sight with his mother and Disciples bemoaning him; his soul comfortless, and forsaken; and all this for those very sins that Satan paints, and puts fine colours upon; oh how should the consideration of this stir up the soul against it, and work the soul to fly from it, and to use all holy means, whereby sin may be subdued, and destroyed. After Julius Caesar was murdered, Antonius brought forth his coat all bloody, and cut, and laid it before the people, saying, look, here you have your Emperor's coat thus bloody, and torn; whereupon the people were presently in an uproar, and cried out to slay those murderers, and they took their tables and stools that were in the place, and set them on fire, and ran to the houses of them that had slam Caesar, and burned them: so when we consider that sin hath slain our Lord Jesus, ah! how should it provoke our hearts to be revenged on sin, that hath murdered the Lord of Glory, and Nolo vivere sine vulnere cum te video vulneratum. Oh my God as long as I see thy wounds, I will never live without wound, saith Bonaventure. hath done that mischief, that all the Devils in Hell could never have done. 'Twas good counsel one gave; never let go out of your minds, the thoughts of a crucified Christ; let these be meat and drink unto you, let them be your sweetness, and consolation; your honey, and your desire; your reading, and your meditation; your life, death, and resurrection. The third device that Satan hath to 3. Device. draw the soul to sin, is by extenuating, and lessening of sin; ah! saith Satan, 'tis but a little pride, a little worldliness, a little uncleanness, a little drunkenness, etc. As Let said of Zoar, Gen. 19 20. it is but a little one, and my soul shall live; alas! saith Satan, 'tis but a very little sin, that you stick so at, you may commit it without any danger to your soul, 'tis but a little one, you may commit it, and yet your soul shall live. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these. FIrst, solemnly consider, that those 1. Remedy. sins, which we are apt to account small, hath brought upon men the greatest wrath of God; as the eating of an Apple; gathering a few sticks on the Sabbaoth day, and touching of the Ark; oh! the dreadful wrath that these sins brought down, upon the Draco the Rigid Lawgiver, being asked why, when sins were not equal, he appointed death to all? Answered, he knew that sins were not all equal; but he knew the least deserved death. So though the sins of men he not all equal, yet the least of them deserves eternal death. heads, and hearts of men; the least sin is contrary to the Law of God, the nature of God, the being of God, and the glory of God, and therefore 'tis often punished severely by God; and do not we see daily the vengeance of the Almighty falling upon the bodies, names, estates, Families, and souls of men for those sins, that are but little ones in their eyes. Surely, if we are not utterly left of God, and blinded by Satan, we cannot but see it. Oh! therefore, when Satan says 'tis but a little one, do thou say, oh! but those sins that thou callest little, are such, that will cause God to rain Hell out of Heaven upon sinners, as he did upon the Sodomites. The second Remedy against this device 2. Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the giving way to a less sin, makes way for the committing of a greater; he that to avoid a greater sin will yield to a lesser, ten thousand to one, but God in Justice will leave that soul to fall into a greater; if we commit one sin to avoid another, 'tis just we should avoid neither; we having not law nor power in our own hands, to keep off sin, as we pleas, and we by yielding to the Psal. 137. ver. 9 Happy shall he be that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the stones. Hugho's Gloss is pious, etc. (Sit nihil in te Babylonicum) Let there be nothing in thee of Babylon, no● only the grown men, but the little ones must be dashed against the stones, not only great sins, but little sins must be killed, or they will kill the soul for ever. lesser, do tempt the tempter to tempt us to the greater. Sin is of an encroaching nature, it creeps on the soul by degrees, step by step, till it hath the soul to the very height of sin; David gives way to his wand'ring eye, and this led him to those foul sins, that caused God to break his bones, and to turn his day into night, and to leave his soul in great darkness. Jocab, and Peter, and other Saints have found this true, by woeful experience, that the yielding to a lesser sin, hath been the ushering in of a greater; the little thief will open the door, and make way for the greater; and the little wedge knocked in will make way for the greater; Satan will first draw thee to sit with the drunkard, and then to sip with the drunkard, and then at last, to be drunk with the drunkard; he will first draw thee to be unclean in thy thoughts, and then to be unclean in thy looks, and then to be unclean in thy words, and at last, to be unclean in thy practices; he will fi●st draw thee to look on the golden wedge, and then to like the golden wedge, and then to handle the golden wedge; and then at last, by wicked ways to gain the golden wedge, though thou runnest the hazard of losing God, and thy soul An Italian having found his enemy at an advantage, promised him, if he would deny his faith, he would save his life; he to save his life denied his faith, which having done, he stabbed him, rejoicing, that by this, he had, at one time, taken revenge both on soul and body. for ever: as you may see in Gehazi, Achan, and Judas, and many in these our days. Sin is never at a stand, Psal. 1. v. 1. First, ungodly, than sinners, than scorners; here they go on from sin to sin, till they come to the top of sin, viz. to sit in the seat of scorners, or as ris in the Septuagint (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) to affect the honour of the chair of Pestilence. Austin writing upon John, tells a story of a certain man, that was of an opinion, that the Devil did make the fly, and not God; saith one to him, if the Devil made flies, than the Devil made worms, and God did not make them; for they are living creatures, as well as flies; true said he, the Devil did make worms; but said the other, if the Devil did make worms, than he made birds, beasts, and man; he granted all: thus saith Austin, by denying God in the fly, he came to deny God in man, and to deny the whole Creation; by all this we see, that the yielding to lesser sins, draws the soul to the committing of greater; Ah! how many, in these days have fallen, first, to have low thoughts of Scripture, and Ordinances, and then to slight Scripture, and Ordinances, and then to make a nose of wax of Scripture, and Ordinances, and then to cast off Scripture and Ordinances; and then at last, to advance, and lift up themselves, and their Christ-dishonouring, and soul-damning opinions, A young man being long tempted to kill his Father or lie with his mother, or be drunk, he thought to yield to the lesser, viz. to be drunk, that he might be rid of the greater; but when he was drunk, he did both kill his Father, and lie with his Mother. above Scripture and Ordinances. Sin gains upon men's souls by insensible degrees, Ecclesiastes 10. v. 13. The beginning of the words of his mouth is foolishness, and the end of his talking is mischievous madness: Corruption in the heart, when it breaks forth, is like a breach in the Sea, which gins in a narrow passage, till it eat through, and cast down all before it. The debates of the soul are quick, and soon ended; and that may be done in a moment, that may undo a man for ever. When a man hath begun to sin, he knows not where, or when, or how he shall make a stop of sin; usually the soul goes on from evil to evil, from folly, to folly, till it be ripe for eternal mis●ry; men usually grow from being nought, to be very nought, and from very nought to be stark nought, and then God sets them at nought for ever. The third Remedy against this third 3. Remedy. device, that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is solemnly to consider, that 'tis sad to stand with God for a trifle; Dives would not give a crumb, therefore Luk 16. 21. he should not receive a drop; 'tis the greatest folly in the world, to adventure the going to hell for a small matter; I tasted but a little honey, said Jonathan, 1 Sam. 14. 43. and I must die; it is a most unkind, and unfaithful thing, to break with God for a little; little sins carry with them but little temptations to sin, It was a vexation to King Lysimachus, that his staying to drink one small draught of water, lost him his Kingdom: and so it will eternally vex some souls at last▪ that for some one little sin, (compared with great transgressions) they have lost God Heaven, and their souls for ever. and then a man shows most viciousness, and unkindness, when he sins on a little temptation; 'Tis devilish to sin without a temptation, 'tis little less than devilish to sin on a little occasion; the less the temptation is to sin, the greater is that ●inne; Saul's sin in not staying for Samuel, was not so much in the matter, but it was much in the malice of it; for though Samuel had not come at all, yet Saul should not have offered Sacrifice; but this cost him dear, his Soul, and his Kingdom. 'Tis the greatest unkindness that can be showed to a friend, to adventure the complaining, bleeding, and grieving of his soul, upon a light and slight occasion,: so 'tis the greatest unkindness that can be showed to God, Christ, and the Spirit, for a soul to put God upon complaining, Christ upon bleeding, and the Spirit upon grieving, by yielding to little sins; therefore, when Satan says 'tis but a little one, do thou answer, that often times there is the greatest unkindness showed to God's glorious Majesty, in the acting of the least folly, and therefore thou wilt not displease thy best and greatest friend, by yielding to his least enemy. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan is, seriously to consider, that there is great danger, yea many times most danger, in the smallest sins; 1 Cor. 5. 6. A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump; if the Serpent wind in his head, he will draw his whole body after. Greater sins do sooner startle the soul, and awaken, and rouse up the soul to repentance, Caesar was stabbed with bodkins. than lesser sins do; little sins often slide into the soul, and breed, and work secretly, and undiscernably Pope Adrian was choked with a Gnat. in the soul, till they come to be so strong, as to trample upon the soul, and to cut the throat of the soul; there is, oftentimes, greatest danger to our bodies in the least Diseases, that hang upon us, because we are apt to make A Scorpion is little, yetable to sting a Lion to death; a Mouseiss but little, yet killeth an Elephant, if he gets up into his trunk. light of them, and to neglect the timely use of means for the removing of them, till they are grown so strong, that they prove mortal to us: so there is most danger often in the least sins, we are apt to take no notice of them, and to neglect those heavenly helps, whereby they should be weakened and destroyed, till they are grown up to that strength that we are ready to cry out, the Medicine is The Leopard being great, is poisoned with a head of Garlic. too weak for the Disease; I would pray, and I would hear, but I am afraid that sin is grown up by degrees to such a head, that I shall never be able to prevail over it; but as I have begun to fall, The smallest errors prove many times most dangerous. It is as much treason to coin pence, as bigger pieces. so I shall utterly fall before it, and at last perish in it, unless the power, and free grace of Christ doth act gloriously, beyond my present apprehension, and expectation. The Viper is killed by the little young ones that are nourished, and cherished in her belly: so are many men eternally killed and betrayed by the little One little miscarriage doth in the eyes of the world, over-shaddow all a Christians Graces, as one little cloud doth sometimes overshadow the whole body of the Sun. sins (as they call them) that are nourished in their own bosoms. I know not, saith one, whether the maintenance of the least sin, be not worse than the commission of the greatest; for this may be of frailty, that argues obstinacy; a little hole in the Ship sinks it; a small breach in a Sea-bank carries away all before it; a little stab at the heart kills a man, and a little sin without a great deal of mercy, will damn a man. The fift Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. Melius mori fame quam Idolothys is vesci, August. It is better to die with hunger, then to eat that which is offered to Idols. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that other Saints have chosen rather to suffer the worst of torments, rather than they would commit the least sin, i. e. such as the world accounts: so as you may see in Daniel, and his Companions, that would rather choose to burn, and be cast to the Lions, than they would bow to the Image that Nebuchadnezzer had set up: when this peccadillo (in the world's account) and a hot fiery furnace stood in competition, that they must either fall into sin, or be cast into the Many Heathens would rather die, then cousin or cheat one another: so faithful were they one to another. Will not these rise in judgement against many Professors in these days, who make nothing of overreaching one another? fiery furnace; such was their tenderness of the honour and glory of God, and their hatred and indignation against sin, that they would rather burn, than sin; they knew that it was far better to burn for their not sinning, then that God and conscience should raise a hell, a fire in their bosoms, for sin. I have read of that noble servant of God, Marcus Arethusius, Minister of a Church in the time of Constantine, who in Constantine's time, had been the cause of overthrowing an Idols Temple; afterwards, when Julian came to be Emperor, he would force the people of that place to build it up again, they were ready to do it, but he refused; whereupon, those that were his own people, to whom he preached, took him, and stripped him of all his , and abused his naked body, and gave it up to the Children, to launce it with their pen-knives, and then caused him to be put in a basket, and anointed his naked body with Honey, and set him in the Sun, to be stung with Wasps; and all this cruelty they shown, because he would not do any thing toward the building up of this Idol-Temple; nay, they came to this, that if he would do but the least towards it, if he would give but a halfpenny to it, they would save him; but he refused all, though the giving of a halfpenny might have saved his life; and in doing this, he did but live up to that principle that most Christians talk of, and all profess, but few come up to it, viz. That we must choose rather to suffer the worst of Torments that men and Devils can invent, and inflict, then to commit the least sin, whereby God should be dishonoured, our consciences wounded, Religion reproached, and our own souls endangered. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the soul is never able to stand under the guilt and weight of the least sin, when God shall set it home upon the soul; the least sin will press, and sink the stoutest sinner as low as hell: when God shall open the eyes of a sinner, and make him see the horrid filthiness, and abominable vildness that is in sin. What so little, base, and vile creatures as louse or gnats, and yet by these little, poor creatures, God so plagued stouthearted Pharaoh, and all Egypt, that ●ainting under it, they were forced to cry out, This is the finger of God: When little Exod. 8. 16, 17, 18, 19 Creatures, yea the least Creatures, shall be armed with a power from God, they shall press and 〈◊〉 down the greatest, proudest, and stoutest Tyrants that breath: so when God shall put a sword The Tyrant Maximinus, who had set forth his Proclamation engraven in brass, for the utter abolishing of Christ, and his Religion, was eaten of Lice. into the hand of a little sin, and arm it against the soul, the soul will faint and fall under it. Some, who have but projected adultery, without any actual acting it; and others having found a trifle, and made no conscience to restore it, knowing by the light of natural Conscience, that they did not do, as they would be done by; and others, that have had some unworthy thought of God, have been so frighted, amazed, una guttula malae conscien●iae totum mare mundani gaudii absorbet. i e. One drop of an evil conscience swallows up the whole sea of worldly joy. How great a pain, not to be borne, comes from the prick of this small thorn, said one. and terrified for these sins which are small (in men's account) that they have wished they had never been, that they could take no delight in any earthly comfort; that they have been put to their wit's end, ready to make away themselves, wishing themselves annihilated. Mr Perkins mentions a good man, but very poor, who being ready to starve, stole a Lamb, and being about to eat it, with his poor children, and (as his manner was afore meat) to crave a blessing, durst not do it; but fell into a great perplexity of Conscience, acknowledged his fault to the owner, promising payment if ever he should be able. The seventh Remedy against this Device, 7 Remedy. is solemnly to consider, That there is more evil in the least sin, then in the greatest affliction; and this appears as clear as the Sun, by the severe dealing of God the Father, with his beloved Son, who let all the vials of his fiercest wrath upon him, and that for the least sin as well as for the greatest; The wages Death is the hire of the least sin; the best wages that the least sin gives his soldiers, is death of all sorts; in a strict sense, there is no sin little, because no little God to sin against. of sin is death, of sin indefinitely, whether great or small; Oh! how should this make us tremble, as much at the least spark of lust, as at hell itself? Considering that God the Father would not spare his bosom Son, no, not for the least sin; but would make him drink the dregs of his wrath. And so much for the Remedies that may fence and preserve our souls from being drawn to sin, by this third Device of Satan. The fourth Device that Satan hath 4 Device. to draw the soul to sin, is, by presenting to the soul the best men's sins, and by hiding from the soul their virtues; by showing the soul their sins, and by hiding from the soul, their sorrow's, and repentance; as by setting before the soul the Adultery of David, the Pride of Hezekia●, the Impatience of Job, the Drunkenness of Noah, the Blasphemy of Peter, etc. and by hiding from the soul the tears, the sighs, the groans, the melt, humblings, and repentings of these precious souls. Now the Remedies against this Device of the Devil are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the Spirit of the Lord hath been as careful to note the Saints rising by repentance out of sin, as he hath to note their falling into sin; David falls fearfully, but by repentance he rises sweetly. Blot out my transgressions, wash me throughly from my iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin; for I acknowledge my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me. Purge me with Hyssop, and I shall be clean, wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow; deliver me from blood-guiltiness, O God, thou God of my salvation. 'Tis true, Hezekia●'s heart was lifted up, under the abundance of mercy, that God had cast in upon him; and 'tis as true, that Hezekia● 2 Chron. 32. 25, 26. humbled himself, for the pride of his heart: so that the wrath of the Lord came not upon him, nor upon Jerusalem, in the days of Hezekiah. 'Tis true, Job curses the day of his Birth, and 'tis ●● true, that he rises by repentance. Behold, I am vile (saith he) what shall I answer thee? Job. 40. 4, 5. ch. 42. 5, 6. I will lay my hand upon my mouth, once have I spoken, but I will not answer, yea, twice, but I will proceed no further. I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ●are, but now mine eye seethe thee: Wherefore I abhor my Tertullian saith that he was (Nalli rei natus nisi penitentiae) borne for no other purpose, but to repent. self, and repent in dust and ashes. Peter falls dreadfully, but rises by repentance sweetly; a look of love from Christ, melts him into tears; he knew that repentance was the key to the Kingdom of Grace. As once his Faith was so great, that he leapt, as it were, into a sea of waters, to come to Christ: so now his repentance was so great, that he leapt, as it were, into a sea of tears, for Luther confesses, that before his conversion, he met not with a more displeasing word in allhis study of Divinity, then Repent, but afterward he took delight in the work (poenitens de peccaio dolet & de dolore g●udet) to sorrow for his sin, and then to rejoice in his sorrow. that he had gone from Christ. Some say, that after his sad fall, he was ever and anon weeping, and that his face was even furrowed with continual tears; he had no sooner took in poison, but he vomited it up again, ere it got to the vitals; he had no sooner handled this Serpent, but he turned it into a rod to scourge his soul with remorse, for sinning against such clear light, and strong love, and sweet discoveries of the heart of Christ to him. Clement notes, that Peter so repent, that all his life after, every night, when he heard the Cock crow, he would fall upon his knees, and weeping bitterly, would beg pardon of this sin; Ah souls! you can easily sin as the Saints, but can you repent with the Saints? Many can sin with David and Peter, that cannot repent with David and Peter, and so must perish for ever. Theodosius the Emperor pressing, that he might receive the Lords Supper, excuses Theodorit. hist. l. 4. c. 17. his own foul fact by David's doing the like, to which Ambrose replies, Thou hast followed David transgressing, follow David repenting, and then think thou of the Table of the Lord. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that these Saints did not make a trade of sin, they fell once, or twice (and rose by Repentance) that they might The Saints cannot sin (voluntate plenâ sed semiplena) with a whole will, but as it were with an half will, an unwilling willingness, not with a full consent, but with a dissenting consent. keep the closer to Christ for ever; they fell accidentally, occasionally, and with much reluctancy; and thou sinnest presumptuously, obstinately, readily, delightfully, and customarily; thou hast by thy making a trade of sin, contracted upon thy soul a kind of cursed necessity of sinning, that thou canst as well cease to be, or cease to live, as thou canst cease to sin; sin is by custom become as another nature to thee, which thou canst not, which thou wilt not lay aside, though thou knowest, that if thou dost not lay sin aside, God will lay thy soul aside for ever; though thou knowest, that if sin and thy soul do not part, Christ and thy soul can never meet; if thou wilt make a trade of sin, and cry out, did not David sin thus, and Noah 2 Pet. 2. 14. Pro. 4, 14. 16. Though sin do (habitare) dwell in the regenerate, as Austin notes, yet it doth not (regnare) reign over the regenerate, they rise by repentance. sin thus, and Peter sin thus, & c.? No, their hearts turned aside to folly one day, but thy heart turns aside to folly every day, and when they were fallen, they rise by repentance, and by the actings of Faith upon a crucified Christ, but thou fallest, and hast no strength, nor will to rise; but wallowest in sin, and wilt eternally die in thy sins, unless the Lord be the more merciful to thy soul. Dost thou think, oh soul, this is good reasoning? Such a one tasted poison but once, and yet narrowly escaped, but I do daily drink poison, yet I shall escape: yet such is the mad reasoning of vain souls; David and Peter, etc. sinned once foully and fearfully, they tasted poison but once, and were sick to death, but I taste it daily, and yet shall not taste of eternal death. Remember, oh souls, that the day is at hand, when self-flatterers will be found self-deceivers, yea, self-murtherers. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that though God doth not (nor never will) disinherit his people for their sins, yet he hath severely punished his people for their sins. David sins, and God breaks his bones for his sin. Make me to Psalm 51. 8. Josephus reports, that not long after the Jews had crucified Christ on the cross, so many of them were condemned to be crucified, that there were not places enough for crosses, nor crosses enough for the bodies that were to be hung thereon hear joy and gladness, that the bones which thou hast broken, may rejoice. And because thou host do●e this, the Sword shall not departed from thy house, to the day of thy death. Though God will not utterly take from them his loving kindness, nor suffer his faithfulness to fail, nor break his Covenant, nor alter the thing that is gone out of his mouth, yet will he visit their transgressions with a rod, and their iniquity with stripes, Psal. 89. 30. 35. The Scripture abounds with instances of this kind; this is so known a truth, among all that know any thing of truth, that to cite more Scriptures to prove it, would be to light a Candle to see the Sun at noon. The Jews have a Proverb, that There is no punishment comes upon Israel, in which there is not one ounce of the Golden Calf: Meaning, that that was so great a sin, as that in every plague God remembered it, that had an influence into every trouble that befell them. Every man's heart may say to him in his sufferings, as the heart of Apollodorus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. in the kettle, I have been the cause of this. God is most angry, when he shows no anger, God keep me from this mercy; this kind of mercy is worse than Qui non est crucianus non est christianus, saith Luther, there is not a Christian that carries not his cross. all other misery. One writing to a sick friend, hath this expression, I account it a part of unhappiness not to know adversity, I judge you to be miserable, because you have not been miserable. 'Tis mercy that our affliction is not an execution, but a correction; he that hath deserved hanging, may be glad if he scape with a whipping. God's corrections are our instructions, his lashes our lessons, his Psal. 94. 12. Pro. 3. 12, 13. ch. 6. 23. 26. Isaiah 9 scourges our Schoolmasters, his chastisements our advertisements; and to note this, both the Hebrews, and the Greeks express chastening and teaching 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. by one and the same word (musar paideia) because the latter is the true Job 36. 8, 9, 10. end of the former, according to that in the Proverb, Smart makes wit, and vexation gives understanding; whence Luther fitly calls affliction, The Christian's man's Divinity: Theologiam christianorum. so saith Job (Chap. 33. 16. 19) God speaketh once, yea twice, yet man perceiveth it not, in a dream, in a vision of the night, when deep sleep falleth upon men, in slumberings upon the Bed: then he openeth Afflictiones benedictiones. Ber. Afflictions are blessings. the ears of men, and sealeth their instruction, that he may withdraw man from his purpose, and hid pride from man: he keepeth back his soul from the pit, and his life from perishing by the sword. When Satan shall tell thee of other men's sins, to draw thee to sin, do thou then think of the same men's sufferings, to keep thee from sin; lay thy hand upon thy heart, and say oh my soul, if thou sinnest with David, thou must suffer with David, etc. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, That there are but two main ends of Gods recording of the falls of his Saints; and the one is, to keep those from fainting, I have known a good man, said Bernard, who when he heard of any, that had committed some notorious sin, he was wont to ●ay with himself (ille body & ego cras) he fell to day, so may I to morrow. sinking, and despair, under the burden of their sins, who fall through weakness and infirmity; and the other is, that their falls may be as Landmarks, to warn others that stand, to take heed lest they fall; it never entered into the heart of God to record his children's sins, that others might be encouraged to sin, but that others might be warned to look to their stand, and to hang the faster upon the skirts of Christ, and avoid all occasions and temptations, that may occasion the soul to fall, as others have fallen. When they have been left by Christ, the Lord hath made their sins as Landmarks, to warn his people to take heed how they come near those sands, and rocks; those snares and baits that have been fatal to the choicest treasures, to wit, the joy, peace, comfort, and glorious enjoyments of the bravest spirits, and noblest souls that ever sailed through the ocean of this sinful, troublesome world; as you may see in David, Job, Peter, etc. There is nothing in the world, that can so notoriously cross the grand end of Gods recording of the sins of his Saints, then for any from thence, to take encouragement to sin, and where ever you find such a soul, you may write him Christlesse, Graceless, a soul cast off by God, a soul that Satan hath by the hand; and the eternal God knows whether he will lead him. The fifth Device that Satan hath, to 5 Device. draw the soul to sin, is, to present God to the soul, as one made up all of mercy; oh! saith Satan, you need not make such a matter of sin, you need not be so fearful of sin, nor so unwilling to sin; for God is a God of mercy, a God full of mercy, a God that delights in mercy, a God that is ready to show mercy, a God that is never weary of showing merey, a God more prone to pardon his people, then to punish his people; and therefore he will not take advantage against the soul, and why then, saith Satan, should you make such a matter of sin? Now the Remedies against this Device of Satan are these. THe first Remedy is, seriously to consider, 1 Remedy. that 'tis the sorest judgement in this world, to be left to sin upon any pretence whatsoever; oh! unhappy man, when God leaveth thee to thy Humanum est peccare, Diaboli cum perseverare, & Angelicum resurgere (Austin) i. e. It is a humane thing to fall into sin, a devilish to persevere therein, and an Angellcal or supernatural to rise from it. self, and doth not resist thee in thy sins; woe, woe to him, at whose sins God doth wink: when God lets the way to Hell be a smooth and pleasant way, that is hell on this side hell, and a dreadful sign of God's indignation against a man; a token of his rejection, and that God doth not intent good unto him; that is a sad word, Ephraim is joined to Idols, let him alone, he will be uncounsellable, and uncorrigible, he hath made a match with mischief, he shall have his bellyful of it, he falls with open eyes, let him fall at his own peril; and that's a terrible saying, So I gave them up unto their own hearts Psal. 81. 12. Hosea 4. 14. lusts, and they walked in their own counsels. A soul given up to sin▪ is a soul ●ipe for hell, a soul posting to destruction. Ah A me, me slava Domine. Deliver me O Lord from that evil man, myself. Aug. Lord! this mercy I humbly beg, that what ever thou givest me up to, thou wilt not give me up to the ways of mine own heart; if thou wilt give me up to be afflicted, or tempted, or reproached, etc. I will patiently sit down, and say, 'Tis the Lord, let him do with me what seems good in his own eyes; do any thing with me, lay what burden thou wilt upon me, so thou dost not give me up to the ways of my own heart, etc. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that God is as just, as he is merciful: as the Scriptures speak him out to be a very merciful God, so they speak him 2 Pet 2. 4, 5, 6. God hanged them up in Gibbets, as it were, that others might hear, and fear, and do no more so wickedly. out to be a very just God; witness his casting the Angels out of Heaven, and his binding them in chains of darkness, till the judgement of the great day; and witness his turning Adam out of Paradise; his drowning of the old world; and his raining Hell out of Heaven upon Sodom; and witness all the crosses, losses, sicknesses, and diseases that be in the world; and witness Tophet that is prepared of old, witness his treasuring up of wrath, against the day of wrath, unto the revelation of the just judgements of God; but above all, witness the pouring forth of all his wrath upon his bosom Son, when he did bare the sins of his people, and cried out, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken-me? Mat. 27. 46. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that sins against mercy, will bring the greatest, and the sorest judgements upon men's heads and hearts; Mercy is Alpha, Justice is Omega; David speaking of these Attributes, placeth Mercy in the forward, and Justice in the rearward, saying, My Song shall be of Mercy and Judgement; Psal. 101. 1. when Mercy is despised, than Justice takes the Throne. God is like a Quantò gradus altior tantò casus gravior, the higher we are indignity, the more grievous is our fall and misery. Prince, that sendeth not his Army against Rebels, before he hath sent his Pardon, and proclaimed it by a Herald of Arms. He first hangs out the white Flag of Mercy, if this wins men in, they are happy for ever; but if they stand out, then God will put forth his red Flag of Justice and Judgement; if the one be despised, the other shall be felt with a witness; see this in the Israelites, Deus tardus est ad iram sed tarditatem gravitate ●●nae compensat. God is slow to anger, but he recompenseth his slowness with grievousness of punishment. he loved them, and chose them, when they were in their blood, and most unlovely, he multiplied them, not by means, but by miracle; for from seventy souls, they grew in few years, to six hundred thousand; the more they were oppressed, the more they prospered: like Camomile, the more you tread it, the more you spread it; or to a Palm tree, the more it is pressed, the further it spreadeth; or to fire, the more it is raked the more it burneth; their mercies came in upon them, like Job's Messengers, one upon the neck of another. If we abuse mercy to serve our lusts, then in Salvians phrase, God will rain hell out of Heaven, rather than not visit for such sins. He put off their sackcloth, and girded them with gladness, and compassed them about with songs of deliverance; he carried them on the wings of Eagles, he kept them as the Apple of his eye, etc. But they abusing his mercy, became the greatest objects of his wrath; as, I know not the man that can reckon up their mercies: so I know not the man that can sum up the miseries that are come upon them for their sins; for as our Saviour prophesied concerning Jerusalem, That a stone Vespasian broke into their City at Cedron, where they took Christ, on the same Feast day that Christ was taken. he whipped them where they whipped Christ, he sold twenty Jews for a penny, as they sold Christ for 30 pence 8. Andr. cat. should not be left upon a stone: so it was fulfilled forty years after his Ascension, by Vespasian the Emperor, and his Son, Titus, who having besieged Jerusalem, the Jews were oppressed with a grievous famine, in which their food was old shoes, old leather, old hay, and the dung of Beasts; thene died partly of the Sword, and partly of the Famine, eleven hundred thousand of the poorer sort; two thousand in one night were embowelled, six thousand were burned in a porch of the Temple, the whole, City was sacked and burnt, and laid level to the ground, and ninety seven thousand taken Captives, and applied to base and miserable service; as E●sebius and Josephus saith: and to thi● day, in all the parts of the world, are they not the offscouring of the world? none less beloved, and non● more abhorred, than they: And so Caparnaum, that was lifted up to Heaven, was threatened to be Men are therefore the worse, because they ought to be better, and shall be deeper in Hell, because Heaven was offered unto them, but they would not. Ingentia beneficia flagitia, supplicia, good turns aggravate unkindnesses, and men's offences are increased by their obligation. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. shift off, disregard. thrown down to Hell. No souls fall so low into Hell (if they fall) as those souls, that by a hand of mercy, are lifted up nearest to Heaven; you flight souls that are so apt to abuse mercy, consider this, that in the Gospel days, the plagues that God inflicts upon the despisers, and abusers of mercy, are usually spiritual plagues; as blindness of mind, hardness of heart, benumednesse of conscience, which are ten thousand times worse than the worst of outward plagues that can b●fall you, and therefore though you may escape temporal Judgements, yet you shall not escape spiritual Judgements: How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? saith the Apostle. Oh! therefore, when ever Satan shall present God to the soul, as one made up all of mercy, that he may draw thee to do wickedly, say unto him, that sins against mercy will bring upon the soul the greatest misery, and therefore, whatever becomes of thee, thou wilt not sin against mercy, etc. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is seriously to consider, that though Gods general mercy be over all his works, yet his special mercy Augustus in his solemn Feasts gave trifles to some, but gold to others that his heart was most set upon: so God by a hand of general mercy, gives these (poor trifles) outward blessings ●o those that he lest loves, but his gold, his special mercy is only towards those that his heart is most set upon. is confined to those that are divinely qualified; so in Exod. 34. 6, 7. And the Lord passed by before him, and proclaimed, the Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth; keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty, Exod. 20. 6. And showing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my Commandments, Psal. 25. 10. All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth: unto such as keep his Covenant, and his Testimonies, Psal. 32. 10. Many sorrows shall be to the wicked, but he that trusteth in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about, Psal. 33. 18. Behold, the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him, upon them that hope in his mercy. Psal. 103. 11. For as the Heaven is high above the earth: so great is his mercy to as and them that fear him. Ver. 17. But the mercy of the Lord is from everlasting, to everlasting, upon them that fear him. When Satan attempts to draw thee to sin, by presenting God as a God all made up of mercy; oh! then reply, that though God's general mercy extends to all the works of his hand; yet his special mercy is confined to them that are divinely qualified, to them that love h●m, and keep his Commandments, to them that trust in him, that by hope hang upon him, and that fear him, and that thou must be such a one here, or else thou canst never be happy hereafter; thou must partake of his special mercy, or else eternally perish in everlasting misery, notwithstanding Gods general mercy. The fifth Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that those that were once glorious on earth, and are now triumphing in Heaven, did look upon the mercy of God, as the most powerful argument to preserve them from sin, and to fence their souls against sin, and not as an encouragement Psal 26. 3, 4, 5, 6. to sin. Psal. 26. 3, 4, 5, 6. For thy loving kindness is before mine eyes, and I have walked in thy truth; I have not sat with vain persons, neither will I go in with dissemblers: I have hated the Congregation of evil doers, and will not sit with the wicked. So Joseph strengthens himself against sin, from the remembrance of mercy. How then can I (saith he) do this great Gen. 39 9 wickedness, and sin against God? He had fixed his eye upon mercy, and therefore sin could not enter, though the irons entered into his soul, his soul being taken with mercy, was not moved by his Mistress' impudence; Satan knocked oft at the door, but the sight of mercy would not suffer him to answer, or open: Joseph like a Pearl in a Puddle, keeps his virtue still. So Paul, Shall we continue in sin that Grace may abound? God Rom. 6. 1, 2. The stone called P●ntaurus, is of that virtue, that it preserves him that carries it, from taking any harm by poison; the mercy of God in Christ to our souls, is the most precious stone, or Pearled in the world, to preserve us from being poisoned with sin. forbidden; how shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein? There is nothing in the world, that renders a man more unlike to a Saint, and more like to Satan, then to argue from mercy to sinful liberty; from Divine goodness to licentiousness; this is the Devil's Logic, and in whom ever you find it, you may write, This soul is lost. A man may a● truly say, the Sea burns, or fire cools, as that free grace and mercy should make a soul truly gracious to do wickedly. So the same Apostle, I beseech you therefore brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. So John, These things I writ unto you, that you sin not; What was it that he wrote? He wrote, that we might have fellowship with the Father and his Son; 1 John 2. 1, 2. and that the Blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin: and that, if we confess our sins, he is just and faith full to forgive us our sins; and that, if we do sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. These choice favours, and mercies the Apostle holds forth, as the choicest means to preserve the soul from sin, and to keep at the greatest distance from sin, and if this won't do it, you may write the man void of Christ, and grace, and undone for ever. The sixth Device that Satan hath to 6 Device. draw the soul to sin, is, by persuading the soul that the work of Repentance is ●n easy work, and that therefore the soul need not make such a matter of sin; why suppose you do sin, saith Satan, 'tis no such difficult thing to return, and confess, and be sorrowful, and beg pardon, and cry, Lord have mercy upon me; and if you do but this, God will cut the score, and pardon your sins, and save your souls, etc. By this Device Satan draws many a soul to sin, and makes many millions of souls servants, or rather slaves to sin, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy is, seriously to consider, 1 Remedy. Fallen man hath lost (imperium suum, and imperium sui) the command of himself, and the command of the creatures; and certainly, he that cannot command himself, cannot repent of himself. Da poenitentiam & postea indulgentiam, said dying Fulgentius. that Repentance is a mighty work, a difficult work, a work that is above our power. There is no power below that power that raised Christ from the dead, and that made the world, that can break the heart of a sinner, or turn the heart of a sinner; thou art as well melt Adamant, as to melt thine own heart, to turn a flint into flesh, as to turn thine own heart to the Lord; to raise the dead, and to make a world, as to Repent. Repentance is a flower that grows not in Nature's garden. Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the Leopard his spots, then may ye also do good, that are accustomed to do evil, Jer. 13. 23. Repentance is a gift that comes down from above, men are not born with Repentance in their hearts, as they are borne with tongues in their mouths, Acts. 5. It was a vain brag of King Cyrus, that caused it to be written upon his Tombstone (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) I could do all things. So could Paul too, but it was through Christ which strengthened him. 31. Him hath God exalted with his right hand, to be a Prince and a Saviour, for to give Repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins. So in that 2 Tim. 2. 25. In meekness instructing them that oppose themselves, if God peradventure will give them repentance, to the acknowledging of the truth. 'Tis not in the power of any mortal to repent at pleasure: Some ignorant, deluded souls vainly conceit that these five words, Lord have mercy upon me, are efficacious to send them to Heaven; but as many are undone by buying a counterfeit Jewel: so many are in Hell, by mistake of their Repentance; many rest in their Repentance, though it be but the shadow of Repentance, which caused one to say, Repentance damneth more than sin. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider of the nature of true Repentance; Repentance is some other thing then what vain men conceive. Repentance is sometimes taken in a more strict and narrow The Hebrew word for Repentance, is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to return, implying a going back from what a man had done, it notes a returning or converting from one thing to another, from sin to God. The Greeks have two words, by which they express the nature of repentance, one is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which signifies to be careful, anxious, solicitous after a thing is done; the other word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is resipiscentia, afterwit, or after-wisdom, the minds recovering of wisdom, or growing wiser after our folly. Ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dementia & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 post, it being the correction of men's folly, and returning ad sanam mentem. True repentance is a thorough change, both of the mind and manners, optima & aptissima poenitentia est nova vita, saith Luther, which saying is an excellent saying. Repentance for sin is nothing worth, without repentance from sin. If thou repent with a contradiction (saith Tertullian) God will pardon thee with a contradiction; thou repentest, and yet continuest in thy sin, God will pardon thee, and yet send thee to Hell; there's a pardon with a contradiction. Negative goodness serves no man's turn to save him from the axe. It is said of Ithacus, that the hatred of the Priscillian Heresy, was all the virtue that he had. The evil servant did not riot out his Talon. Those Reprobates, Mat. 25. rob not the Saints, but relieved them not; for this they must eternally perish sense, for godly sorrow; sometimes Repentance is taken in a large sense, for Amendment of Life. Repentance hath in it three things, viz. the Act, the Subject, and the Terms. 1. The formal Act of Repentance is a changing, and converting; 'tis often set forth in Scripture by Turning, Turn thou me, and I shall be turned, saith Ephraim; after that I was turned, I repent, saith he; 'tis a turning from darkness to light. 2. The Subject changed, and converted, is the whole man; 'tis both the sinners heart and life: first his heart, than his life; first his person, than his practice and conversation. Wash ye, make you clean; there's the change of their persons; put away the evil of your do from before mine eyes; cease to do evil, learn to do well; there's the change of their practices: So Cast away (saith Ezekiel) all your transgressions, whereby you have transgressed; there's the change of the life; and make you a new heart, and a new spirit, there's the change of the 3. The Terms of this change, and conversion from which, and to which, both heart and life must be changed from all sin, to God; the heart must be changed from the state and power of sin, the life from the acts of sin, but both unto God, the heart to be under his power in a state of grace, the life to be under his rule, in all new obedience, as the Apostle speaks, To open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of satan unto God: so the Prophet Isaiah saith, Let the wicked forsake their ways, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord. Thus much of the nature of Evangelicall Repentance. Now souls, tell me whither it be such an easy thing to repent, as Satan doth suggest; besides what hath been spoken, I desire that you will take notice, that Repentance doth include a turning from the most darling sin: Ephraim shall say, What have I to do any more with Idols? Yea, it's a turning from all sin to God. Ezek. 18. 30. Therefore I will judge you, O House of Israel, every one according to his ways, saith the Lord God: repent, and turn yourselves from all your transgressions: so iniquity shall not be your ruin. Herod turned from many, but turned not from his Herodias, which was his ruin; Judas turned from all visible wickedness, yet he would not cast out that golden Devil Covetousness, and therefore was cast into the hottest place in Hell. He that turns not from every sin, turns not aright from any one sin; every sin strikes at the Honour of God, the Being of God, the Glory of God, the Heart of Christ, the Joy of the Spirit, and the Peace of a man's Conscience; and therefore a soul truly penitent, strikes at all, hates all, conflicts with all; and will labour to draw strength from a crucified Christ to crucifix all; a true penitent knows neither father nor mother, neither right eye, nor right hand, but will pluck out the one, and cut off the other. Saul spared but one Agog, and that cost him his soul and his Kingdom: besides, Repentance is not only a turning from all sin, but also a turning to all good, to a love of all good, to a prising of all good, and to a following after all good. Ezek. 18. 21. But if the wicked will turn from all his sins that he hath committed, and keep all my Statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he shall surely live, be shall not die; that is, only negative righteousness and holiness is no righteousness nor holiness; David fulfilled all the wills of God, and had respect unto all his Commandments, and so had Zacharias and Elizabeth. 'Tis not enough that the Tree bears not ill fruit; but, it must bring forth good fruit, else, it must be cut down, and east into the fire: So, 'tis not enough that you are not thus and thus wicked, but you must be thus and thus gracious, and good, else Divine Justice will put the Axe of Divine Vengeance to the root of your souls, and cut you off for ever. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit, is hewn down, and cast into the fire; besides, Repentance doth include a sensibleness of sins sinfulness, how opposite and contrary 'tis to the blessed God: God is light, sin is darkness, God is life, sin is death, God is Heaven, sin is hell, God is beauty, sin is deformity. Also true Repentance includes a sensibleness of sins mischievousness, how it cast Angels out of Heaven, and Adam out of Paradise; how it laid the first cornerstone in hell, and brought in all the curses, crosses, and miseries, that be in the world, and how it makes men liable to all temporal, spiritual, and eternal wrath; how it hath made men Godless, Christlesse, hopeless, and heavenlesse in this world: further, true repentance doth include sorrow for sin, contrition of heart; it breaks the heart with sighs and sobs, and groans, for that a loving God, and Father is by sin offended, a blessed Saviour a fresh crucified, and the sweet Comforter, the Spirit, True repentance is a sorrowing for sin as it is offensivum Dei, aversivum à Deo, this both comes from God, & drives a man to God, as it did the Church in the Canticles, and the Prodigal. Ezek. 20. 22, 23. grieved and vexed. Again, Repentance doth include, not only a loathing of sin, but also a loathing of ourselves for sin; as a man doth not only loath poison, but he loathes the very dish or vessel that hath the smell of the poison: so a true Penitent doth not only loathe his sin, but he loathes himself, the vessel that still smells of sin. So Ezek. 20. 43. And there shall ye remember your ways and all your do, wherein ye have been defiled; and ye shall loathe yourselves in your own sight, for all your evils that ye have committed; true Repentance will work your hearts, not only to loathe your sins, but also to loathe yourselves. Again, true Repentance doth not only work a man to loathe himself for his sins, but it makes him ashamed of his sin also. What fruit have ye of those things, whereof ye are (now) ashamed? saith the Apostle: so Ezekiel, And thou shalt be confounded, and never open thy mouth any more, because of thy shame, when I am pacified toward thee, for all that thou hast done, saith the Lord God. When a pen●tentiall soul sees his sins pardoned, the anger of God pacified, and Divine Justice satisfied, than he sits down (and blushes, as the Hebrew hath it) as one ashamed; yea, true Repentance doth Quantum displicet Deo immunditia pecca●●, in tantum placet deo eruhiscentia poenitentis. Ber. i e. So much the more God hath been displeased with the blackness of sin, the more will he be pleased with the blushing of the sinner. They that do not burn now in zeal against sin, must ere long burn in Hell for sin. work a man to cross his sinful self, and to walk contrary to sinful self, to take a holy revenge upon sin, as you may see in Paul, the Jailor, Marry Magdalen, and Manasses; this the Apostle shows in that 2 Cor. 7. 10, 11. For godly sorrow worketh repentance never to be repent of, but the sorrow of the world worketh death; for behold the selfsame thing that ye sorrowed after a Godly sort, what carefulness it wrought in you; yea, what clearing of yourselves; yea, what indignation; yea, what fear; yea, what vehement desire; yea, what zeal; yea, what revenge. Now souls, sum up all these things together, and tell me, whether it be such an easy thing to repent, as Satan would make the soul to believe; and I am confident your hearts will answer, that 'tis as hard a thing to repent, as 'tis to make a world, or to raise the dead. I shall conclude this second Remedy, with a worthy saying of a precious holy man, Repentance (saith he) strips us stark naked of all the garments of the old Adam, and leaves not so much as the shirt behind; in this rotten building it leaves not a stone upon a stone. As the Flood drowned Noa'hs own friends, and servants: so must the flood of repenting tears drown our sweetest, and most profitable sins. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that Repentance is a continued act; the word Repent, implies the continuation of it. True Repentance inclines a man's Anselme in his Meditations confesseth, that all his life was either damnable for sin committed, or unprofitable for good omitted and at last concludes (Quid restat o peccat●r nisi ut in tota vita tua deplores totam vitam tuam) Oh what then remains, but in our whole life, to lament the sins of our whole life. heart to perform God's Statutes always, even unto the end; a true Penitent must go on, from Faith, to Faith, from strength to strength, he must never stand still, nor turn back; Repentance is a grace, and must have its daily operation, as well as other graces; true Repentance is a continued spring, where the waters of godly sorrow are always flowing; My sins are ever before me; a true penitent is often casting his eyes back to the days of his former vanity, and this makes him morning and evening to water his couch with his tears: Remember not against me the sins of my youth, saith one blessed Penitent; and I was a blasphemer, and a persecuter, and injurious, saith another Penitent: Repentance is a continued act of turning, a Repentance never to be repent of, a turning never to turn again to folly; a true penitent hath ever something within him to turn from he can never get near enough to God, no, not so near him as once he was; and therefore he is still turning and turning, that he may get nearer and nearer to him; that is his chiefest good, and his only happiness (optimum 'Tis truly said of God, that he is omnia super omnia. maximum) the best, and the greatest; they are every day a crying out, O wretched men that we are, who shall deliver us from this body of death? They are still sensible of sin, and still conflicting with sin, and still sorrowing for sin, and still loathing of themselves for sin; Repentance is no transient act, but a continued act of the soul; and tell me, oh tempted soul! whether it be such an easy thing, as Satan would make thee believe, to be every day a turning, more and more from sin, and a turning nearer and nearer to God, thy choicest blessedness. A true Penitent can as easily content himself with one act of faith, or one act of love, as he can content himself with one act of Repentance. A Jewish Rabbie pressing the practice of Repentance upon his Disciples, exhorting them to be sure to Repent the day before they died; one of them replied, that the day of any man's death was very uncertain; Repent therefore, every day (said the Rabbin) and then you shall be sure to repent the day before you die; you are wise, and know how to apply it to your own advantage. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that if the work of Repentance were such an easy work, as Satan would If thou be backward in the thoughts of Repentance, be forward in the thoughts of Hell; the flames whereof, only the streams of the penitent eye can extinguish. Tertul. make it to be; then certainly so many would not lie roaring, and crying out (of wrath and eternal ruin) under the horrors and terrors of conscience, for not repenting; yea, doubtless, so many millions would not go to hell for not Repenting, if 'twere such an easy thing to repent: Ah! do not poor souls under horrors of conscience, cry out, and say, were all this world a lump of gold, and in our hand to dispose of, we would give it for the least dram of true Repentance, and wilt thou say, it is an easy thing to repent? When a poor sinner, whose Conscience is awakened, shall judge the exchange of all the world, for the least dram of Repentance, to be the happiest exchange that ever sinner made, tell me, oh soul! is it Oh how shalt thou ●ear, and rend thyself? how shalt thou lament fruitless repenting? what wilt thou say? woe is me, that I have not cast off the burden of sin; woe is me, that I have not washed away my spots, but a● now pierced with mine iniquities, now have I lost the surpassing joy of Angels. Basil. good going to hell? is it good dwelling with the devouring fire? with everlasting burn? Is it good to be for ever separated from the blessed and glorious presence of God, Angels, and Saints? And to be for ever shut out from those good things of eternal life? which are so many, that they exceed number, so great, that they exceed measure▪ so precious, that they exceed all estimation; we know, 'tis the greatest misery that can befall the sons of men; and would they not prevent this by Repentance, if it were such an easy thing to repent, as Satan would make it? well then, do not run the hazard of losing God, Christ, Heaven, and thy soul for ever, by harkening to this Device of Satan, viz. That it is an easy thing to Repent, etc. If it be so easy, why then do wicked men's hearts so rise against them, that press the Doctrine of repentance in the sweetest way, and by the strongest and the choicest Arguments that the Scripture doth afford? And why do they kill two at once? The faithful Labourers name, and their own souls, by their wicked words and actings, because they are put upon repenting, which Satan tells them is so easy a thing: surely, were repentance so easy, wicked men would not be so much enraged when that doctrine is by evangelical considerations pressed upon them. The fift Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that to repent of sin is as great a work of grace, as not to sin. By our sinful falls the powers of the soul are weakened, the Yet it is better to be kept from sin, then cu●ed of sin by Repentance, as it is better for a man to be preserved from a disease then to be cured of the disease. strength of grace is decayed, our evidences for Heaven are blotted, fears and doubts in the soul are raised (will God once more pardon this scarlet sin, and show mercy to this wretched soul) and corruptions in the heart are more advantaged, and confirmed, and the conscience of a man after falls, is the more enraged, or the more benumbed; now for a soul, notwithstanding all this, to repent of his falls, this shows, that 'tis as great a work of grace to repent of sin, as 'tis not to sin. Repentance is the vomit of the soul, and of all Physic, none so difficult, and hard, as 'tis to vomit; the same means that tends to preserve the soul from sin, the same means works the soul to rise by Repentance, when 'tis fallen into sin: We know, the mercy and loving kindness of God, is one special means to keep the soul from sin, as David spoke, Thy loving kindness is always before mine eyes, and I have Psal. 26. 3, 4, 5. walked in thy truth; I have not sat with vain persons, neither will I go in with dissemblers. I have hated the Congregation of evil doers, and will not sit with the wicked: So by the same means the soul is raised, by Repentance out of sin, as you may ●ee in Mary Magdalen, who loved much, and Luke 7. 37, 38, 39, etc. Hos 6. 1, 2. wept much, because much was forgiven her: so those in Hosea, Come, let us return unto the Lord, for he hath torn, and he will heal us; he hath smitten, and he will bind us up: after two days he will revive us, in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live in his sight; or before his face, as the Hebrew hath it, i. e. in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 favour, confidence in God's mercy, and love, that he would heal them, and bind up their wounds, and revive their dejected spirits, and cause them to live in his favour, was that which did work their hearts to repent, and return unto him; I might further show you this truth in many other particulars; but this may suffice: only remember this in the gnerall, that there is much of the power of God, and love of God, and faith in God, and fear of God, and care to please God, and zeal for the glory of God, requisite to work a man to repent 2 Cor. 7. 11. of sin, as there is to keep a man from sin, by which you may easily judge, that to repent of sin, is as great a work, as not to sin; and now tell me, oh soul! is it an easy thing not to sin? we know then certainly, 'tis not an easy thing to repent of sin. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that he that now tempts thee to sin, upon this account, that repentance is easy, will ere long, to work thee to despair, Beda tells of a certain great man, that was admonished in his sickness to repent, who answered, that he would not repent yet, for if he should recover, his companions would laugh at him, but growing sicker and sicker, his friends pressed him again to repent; burden he told them it was toolate (Quia jam judicatus sum & condemnatus) for now (said he) I am judged, and condemned. to say, we are thine, and we must follow thee; Now Satan will help to work the soul to look up, and see God angry, and to look inward, and see Conscience accusing and condemning; and to look downwards, and see Hell's mouth open to receive the impenitent soul, and all this to render the work of repentance impossible to the soul; what, saith Satan, dost thou think that that is easy which the whole power of grace cannot conquer, while we are in this world? Is it easy, saith Satan, to turn from some outward act of sin, to which thou hast been addicted? Dost thou not remember that thou hast often complained against such and such particular sins, and resolved to leave them, and yet to this hour thou hast not, thou canst not? What will it then be to turn from every sin? Yea, to mortify, and cut off those sin●, those darling lusts, that are as joints and members, that be as right hands, and right eyes? Hast thou not loved thy sins above thy Saviour? Hast thou not preferred earth before Heaven? Hast thou not all along neglected the means of Grace, and despised the offers of Grace, and vexed the spirit of Grace? There would be no end if I should set before thee the infinite evils that thou hast committed, and the innumerable good services that thou hast omitted, As one Lamachus a Commander said, to one of his soldiers, that was brought before him for a misbehaviour, who pleaded he would do so no more, saith he (Non li cet in bello bis peccare) no man must offend twice in war: so God will not suffer men often to neglect the day of grace. and the frequent checks of thy own Conscience, that thou hast contemned, and therefore thou mayest well conclude, that thou canst never repent, that thou shalt never repent; now saith Satan, do but a little consider thy numberless sins, and the greatness of thy sins, the foulness of thy sins, the heinousness of thy sins, the circumstances of thy sins, and thou shalt easily see, that those sins that thou thoughtest to be but motes, are indeed mountains; and is it not now in vain to repent of them? Surely saith Satan, if thou shouldest seek repentance and grace with tears, as Esau, thou shalt not find it; thy glass is out, thy sun is set, the door of mercy is shut, the golden Sceptre is taken in, and now thou that hast despised mercy, shalt be for ever destroyed by Justice; for such a wretch as thou art to attempt repentance, is to attempt a thing impossible; 'tis impossible that thou, that in all thy life couldst never conquer one sin, shouldest master such a numberless number of sins, which are so near, so dear, so necessary, and so profitable to thee, that have so long bedded and boarded with thee, that have been old acquaintance and companions with thee; hast thou not often purposed, promised, vowed, and resolved to enter upon the Repentanceis a work that must be timely done, or men are utterly undone for ever. Aut poenitendum aut pereundum. practice of repentance, but to this day couldst never attain it: Surely 'tis in vain to strive against the stream, where it is so impossible to overcome; thou art lost, and cast for ever to hell, thou must to hell, thou shalt; ah souls! he that now tempts you to sin, by suggesting to you the easiness of repentance, will at last, to work you to despair, present repentance as the hardest work in all the world, and a work as far above man, as Heaven is above Hell, as light is above darkness. Oh! that you were wise, to break off your sins, by timely repentance. Now the seventh Device that Satan 7 Device. hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by making the soul bold to venture upon the occasions of sin. Saith Satan, you may walk by the Harlot's door, though you won't go into the Harlot's bed; you may sit and sip with the drunkard, though you won't be drunk with the drunkard; you may look upon Jezabels' beauty, and you may play and toy with Daliloh, though you do not commit wickedness with the one, or the other; you may with Achan handle the golden wedge, though you do not steal the golden wedge, etc. Now the Remedies against this Device are these that follow. THe first Remedy, is, solemnly to 1 Remedy. dwell upon those Scriptures that do expressly command us to avoid the occasions of sin, and the least appearance of evil. 1 Thess. 5. 22. Abstain from all Epiphanius saith, that in the old Law, when any dead body was carried by any house, they were enjoined to shut their doors and windows. appearance of evil; whatsoever is heterodox, unsound, and unsavoury, eat it, as you would do a Serpent in your way, or poison in your meats. Theodosius tore the Arrians Arguments, presented to him in writing, because he found them repugnant to the Scriptures; and Augustine retracted even Ironies only, because they had the appearance of lying. When God had commanded the Jews to abstain from Swine's flesh, they would not so much as name it, but in their common talk would call a Sow another thing. To abstain from all appearance of evil, is to do nothing wherein sin appears, or which hath a shadow of sin. Bernard glosseth finely, Quicquid est male celoratum. Whatever is of an ill show, or of ill report, that he may neither wound conscience, nor credit; we must shun, and be of the very show and shadow of sin, if either we tender our credit abroad, or our comfort at home. It was good counsel that Livia gave her Husband Socrates speaketh of two young men that fling away their belts, when being in an Idols Temple, the lustrating water fell upon them, detesting saith the Historian, the garment sported by the flesh. Augustus; it behoveth thee, not only not to do wrong, but not to seem to do so, etc. So Judas 23. v. And others save with fear pulling them out of the fire, hating even the garment spotted by the flesh. 'Tis a phrase taken from legal uncleanness, which was contracted by touching the houses, the vessels, the garments of unclean persons. Under the Law men might not touch a menstruous cloth, nor God would not accept of a spotted peace-offering. So we must not only hate, and avoid gross sins, but every thing that may carry a savour, or susprition of sin; we must abhor the very signs and tokens of sin; so in Proverbs 5. ver. 8. Remove thy way far from her, and come not nigh the door of her house. He that would not be burnt must dread the fire; He that would not hear the bell, must not meddle with the rope. To venture upon the occasion of sin, and then to pray, lead us not into One said, as oft as I have been among vain men, I returned home less a man than I was before. temptation, is all one, as to thrust thy finger into the fire, and then to pray that it might not be burnt. So in the 4. Prov. 14. 15. you have another command, Enter not in the path of the wicked, and go not in the way of evell men, avoid it, and pass not by it, turn from it, and pass away. This triple gradation of Solomon showeth with a great emphasy, how necessary it is for men, to flee from all appearance of sin: as the Seaman shuns sands, and shelves, and as men eat those, that have the plague-sores running upon them: as weeds do endanger the corn, as bad humor● do endanger the blood, or as an infected house doth endanger the neighbourhood: so doth the company of the bad endanger those that are good; entireness with wicked comforts, is one of the strongest chains of hell, and binds us to a participation, both of sin and punishment. The second Remedy against this device 2 Remedy. of Satan is, solemnly to consider, that ordinarily there is no conquest over sin, without the soul turns from the occasion of sin; 'tis impossible for that man to get the conquest of sin, that plays and sports with the occasions of sin; God will not remove the tentation, except The Fable saith, that the Butterfly asked the Owl how he should deal with the fire, which had singed her wings, who counselled her not to behold so much as its smoke. we turn from the occasion. It is a just and righteous thing with God, that he should fall into the pit, that will adventure to dance upon the brink of the pit; and that he should be a slave to sin, that will not flee from the occasions of sin. As long as there is fuel in our hearts for a temptation, we cannot be secure; he that hath gunpowder about him, had need keep far enough off from sparkles; to rush upon the occasions of sin, is both to tempt ourselves, and to tempt Satan to tempt our souls; 'tis very rare that any soul plays with occasions of sin, but that soul is ensnared by sin; 'tis seldom that God keeps that soul from the acts of sin, that will not keep off from the occasions of sin; he that adventures upon the occasions of sin, is as he that would quench the fire with Oil, which is a fuel to maintain it; and increase it. Ah souls! often remember, how frequently you have been overcome by sin, when you have boldly gone upon the occasions of sin; look back souls, to the days of your vanity, wherein you have been as easily conquered, as tempted, vanquished, as assaulted, when you have played with the occasions of sin; and therefore, as you would for the future be kept from the acting of sin, and be made victorious over sin, oh flee from the occasions of sin. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is seriously to consider, that other precious Saints that were once glorious on earth, and are now triumphing in heaven, have turned from the occasions of sin, as Hell itself; as you may see in Joseph, Gen. 39 10. And it came to pass, as she spoke to Joseph day by day, that he harkened not unto her, to lie by her, or to be with her. Joseph was famous for all the four Cardinal virtues; if ever any were in this one temptation, you may see his Fortitude, Justice, Temperance, There are stories of Heathens, that would not look upon excellent beauties, lest they should be ensnared. and Prudence, in that he shuns the occasion (for he would not so much as be with her) and that a man is indeed, that he is in a temptation, which is but a tap to give vent to corruption. The Nazarite might not only not drink wine, but not taste a grape, or the husk of a grape. The Leper was to shave his hair, and pair his nails. The Devil counts a fit occasion, half a conquest; for he knows that corrupt nature hath Democritus plucked out his own eyes, to avoid the danger of uncleanness. a seedplot of all sin, which being drawn forth, and watered by some sinful occasion, is soon set a work to the producing of death and destruction; God will not remove the temptation, till we remove the occasion. A Bird whiles a loft, is safe, but she comes not near the snare without danger; the shunning the occasions of sin renders a man most like the best of men; a soul eminently gracious, dares not come near the train, though he be far off the blow. So Job 31. 1. I made a Covenant with mine eyes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I cut a Covenant; In making Covenants, it was a custom among the Jews, to cut some beast or other in pieces, and to walk between the pieces, to signify, that they desired God to destroy them that should break the Covenant. why then should I think upon a maid? I set a watch at the entrance of my senses, that my foul might not by them be infected, and endangered; the eye is the window of the soul, and if that should be always open, the soul might smart for it. A man may not look intently upon that, that he may nat love entirely. The Disciples were set a gogg, by beholding the beauty of the Temple; 'tis best and safest to have the eye always fixed upon the highest and noblest objects; as the Mariners eye is fixed on the star, when their hand is on the stern: so David, when he was himself, he shuns the occasion of sin, Psal. 26. 4, 5. I have not sat with vain persons, neither will I go in with dissemblers; I have hated the Congregation of evil doers, and will not sit with the wicked. Stories speak of some that could not sleep, when they thought of the Trophies of other Worthies, that went before them; the highest and choicest examples are to some, and should be to all very quickening and provoking; and oh! that the examples of those worthy Saints, David, Joseph, and Job, might prevail with all your souls to shun and avoid the occasions of sin; every one should strive to be like to them in grace, that they desire to be equal with in glory. He that shooteth at the Sun, though he come far short, will shoot higher, than he that aimeth at a shrub; 'tis best (and it speaks out much of Christ within) to eye the highest, and the worthiest examples. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that the avoiding the occasions of sin, is an evidence of grace, and that which lifts up a man above most other men in the world; that a man is indeed, which he is in temptation; and when sinful occasions do present themselves before the soul, this speaks out both the truth, Plutarch saith of Demosthenes, that he was excellent at praising the worthy acts of his Ancestors, but not so at imitating them, oh that this were not applicable to many professors in our times. and the strength of grace; when with Lot, a man can be chaste in Sodom, and with Timothy can live temperately in Asia, among the luxurious Ephesians; and with Job can walk uprightly in the land of Us, where the people were profane in their lives, and superstitious in their worship; and with Daniel, be holy in Babylon; and with Abraham righteous in Chaldea; and with Nehemiah, zealous in Damascus, etc. Many a wicked man is big, and full of sinful corruption, but shows it not for want of occasion; but that man is surely good, who in his course will not be bad, though tempted by occasions; a Christlesse soul is so far from refusing occasions when they come in his way, that he looks and longs after them, and rather than he will go without them, he will buy them not only with love or money, but also with the loss of his soul; nothing but grace can fence a man against the occasions of sin, when he is strongly tempted thereunto; therefore as you would cherish a precious evidence in your own bosoms, of the truth and strength of your graces, eat all sinful occasions. The eight Device that Satan hath to 8 Device. draw the soul to sin, is, by presenting 'Twas a weighty saying of Seneca (Nihil est infelicius eo, cui nil nunquam contigit adverse; there is nothing more unhappy, than he who never felt adversity. to the soul the outward mercies, that vain men enjoy, and the outward miseries, that they are freed from, whilst they have walked in the ways of sin. Saith Satan, dost thou not see oh soul! the many mercies, that such and such enjoy, that walk in those very ways, that thy soul startles to think of, and the many crosses that▪ they are delivered from, even such as makes other men (that say they dare not walk in such ways) to spend their days in sighing, weeping, groaning, and mourning, and therefore saith Satan, if ever thou wouldst be freed from the dark night of adversity, and enjoy the sunshine of prosperity, thou must walk in their ways: by this stratagem the Devil took those in the 44 Jeremiah, 16, 17, 18. As for the word that thou hast spoken unto us, in the name of the Lord, we will not hearken unto thee; but we will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth of our mouth, to burn Incense unto the Queen of Heaven, and to pour Some of the Heathens would be wicked as their Gods were, counting it a dishonour to their God, to be unlike to him. Lactan tius. out drink-offrings unto her, as we have done, we and our Fathers, our Kings, and our Princes in the Cities of Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem: for than had we plenty of victuals, and were well, and saw no evil. But since we left off to burn Incense to the Queen of Heaven, and to pour out drink-offerings unto her, we have wanted all things, and have been consumed by the sword, and by the famine. This is just the language of a world of ignorant, profane, and superstitious souls in London, and England, that would have made them a Captain 'Tis said of one of the Emperors, that Rome had no war in his daves, because 'twas plague enough to have such an Emperor; you are wise, and know how to apply it. to return to bondage, yea to that bondage that was worse than that the Israelites groaned under. Oh, say they, since such and such persons have been put down, and left off, we have had nothing but plundering and taxing, and butchering of men, etc. and therefore we will do, as we and our Kings and Nobles, and Fathers have formerly done; for than had we plenty at home, and peace abroad, etc. and there was none to make us afraid. Now the Remedies against this Device of Satan, are these that follow. THe first Remedy is, solemnly to consider, 1 Remedy. that no man knows how the heart of God stands by his hand, his hand of mercy may be towards a man, when his heart may be set against that man; as you may see in Saul, and Tully judged the Jews Religion to be naught, because they were so often overcome, & impoverished, and afflicted; and the Religion of Rome to be right, because the Romans prospered, and became Lords of the world; & yet though the Romans had his hand, the Jews had his heart; for they were dearly beloved, though sorely afflicted. others; and the hand of God may be set against a man, when the heart of God is dearly set upon a man, as you may see in Job and Ephraim; the hand of God was sorely set against them, and yet the heart and bowels of God were strongly working towards them; no man knoweth either love or hatred, by outward mercy or misery; for all things come alike to all, to the righteous, and to the unrighteous; to the good, and to the bad, to the clean, and to the unclean, etc. The sun of prosperity shines as well upon brambles of the Wilderness, as fruit-trees of the Orchard; the snow and hail of adversity lights upon the best gardens, as well as the stinking dunghills, or the wild waste. Ahabs and Josiah's ends concur in the very circumstances. Saul and Jonathan, though different in their natures, deserts, and deportments, yet in their deaths they were not divided. Health, wealth, honours, etc. crosses, sicknesses, losses, etc. are cast upon good men, and bad men promiscuously. The whole Turkish Empire is Nihil est nisi mica panis. Luther. nothing else but a crust, cast by Heavens great Housekeeper to his dogs. Moses dies in the Wilderness, as well as those that murmured; Nabal is rich, aswell as Abraham; Achitophel wise, aswell as Solomon; and Doeg honoured by Soul, as well as joseph was by Pharaoh. Usually the worst of men have most of these outward things, and the best of men have least of Earth, though most of Heaven. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, That there is nothing in the world that doth so provoke God to be wrath, and angry, as men's taking encouragement from God's goodness, and mercy, to do wickedly; this you may see by that wrath that fell upon the old world, and by Gods raining hell out of Heaven upon Such souls make God a God of clouts, one that will not do as he saith, but they shall find God to be as severe in punishing, as he is to others gracious in pardoning. Good turns aggravate unkindnesses, and our guilt is increased by our obligations. Sodom and Gomorah. This is clear in that 44 of Jeremiah, from the 20 verse, to the 28 verse, the words are worthy of your best meditation; oh that they were engraven in all your hearts, and constant in all your thoughts! though they are too large for me to transcribe them, yet they are not too large for you to remember them: To argue from mercy to sinful liberty, is the Devil's Logic, and such Logicians do ever walk, as upon a mine of Gunpowder, ready to be blown up; no such souls can ever avert, or avoid the wrath of God. This is wickedness at the height, for a man to be very bad, because God is very good, a worse spirit than this is not in hell; ah Lord! doth not wrath, yea the greatest wrath, lie at this man's door? Are not the strongest chains of darkness prepared for such a soul? To sin against mercy, is to sin against humanity, it is bestial, nay it is worse. To render good for evil, is Divine, to render good for good, is humane, to render evil for evil, is brutish; but to render evil for good, is devilish; and from this evil deliver my soul oh God. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remdy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that there is no greater misery in this life, than not to be in misery; no greater Religio peperit divitias & filia devoravit matrem. Religion brought forth Riches, and the daughter soon devoured the Mother, saith Augustine. affliction, than not to be afflicted; woe, woe to that soul that God will not spend a rod upon; this is the saddest stroke of all, when God refuses to strike at all. Ephraim is joined to Idols, let him alone. Why should you be smitten any more, you will revolt more and more. When the Physician gives over the Patient, you say ring out his knell, the man is dead: so when God gives over a soul to sin, without control, you may truly say, this soul is lost; you may ring out his knel, for he is twice dead, and plucked up by the roots. Freedom from punishment is the mother of security, the stepmother of virtue, the poison of Religion, the moth of holiness, and the introducer of wickedness; nothing said one, seems more unhappy to me, than he to whom no adversity hath happened. Outward mercies ofttimes prove a snare to our souls. I will lay a stumbling block, Ezek. 3. 20. Vatablus his note there is Faciam, ut omnia habeant prospera; calamitatibus eum à peccato non revocabo. I will prosper him in all things, and not by affliction, restrain him from sin. Prosperity hath been a stumbling block, at which millions have stumbled, and fallen, and broke the neck of their souls for ever. The fourth Remedy against this device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is seriously to consider, that the wants of wicked men under all their outward mercy, & freedom from adversity, is far greater than all their outward enjoyments. They have many mercies, yet they want more than they enjoy; the mercies which they enjoy are nothing to the mercies they want; 'Tis true, they have honours, and riches, and pleasures and friends, and are mighty in power, their seed is established in their sight with them, and their offspring before their eyes; their houses are safe from fear, neither is the rod of God upon them; They send forth their little ones like a flock, and their children dance. They take the Timbrel and Harp, and rejoice at the Men that enjoy all worldly comforts, may truly say, Omnes humanae conjolationes sunt desolationes. sound of the Organ; they spend their days in wealth, their eyes stand out with fatness, they have more than heart can wish: And they have no bands in their death, but their strength is firm; They are not in trouble as other men; as David and Job speak; yet all this is nothing to what they want; they want interest in God, Christ, the Spirit, the Promises, the Covenant of Grace, and everlasting Glory. They want acceptation and reconciliation with God; They want Righteousness, Justification, Sanctification, Adoption, and Redemption. They want the pardon of sin, and power against sin, and freedom from the dominion of sin: They want that favour that is better than life, and that joy that is unspeakable and full of glory; and that peace that passes understanding; and that Nec Christus nec coelum pati▪ tur hyperbolen, Neither Christ, nor Heaven, can be hyperbolized. grace, the least spark of which, is more worth than Heaven and Earth. They want a House that hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God; they want those riches that perish not; that glory that fades not, that Kingdom that shakes not. Wicked men are the most needy men in the world, yea, they want those two things that should render their mercies sweet, viz. The blessing of God, and content with their condition; and without which, their Heaven is but Hell, on this side Hell: When their hearts are lifted up, and grown big upon the thoughts of their abundance; if conscience does but put A crown of gold cannot cu●e the head ach, nor a velvet slipper cannot ease the Gout, no mo●e can honour or riches, etc. quiet and still the Conscience. The heart of man is a three square triangle, which the whole round circle of the world cannot fill (as Mathematicians say) but all the corners will complain of emptiness and hunger for something else. in a word, and say, 'tis true, here is this and that outward mercy, oh! but where is an interest in Christ? Where is the favour of God? Where are the comforts of the holy Ghost? Where are thy evidences for Heaven, & c.? This word from Conscience makes the man's countenance to change, his thoughts to be troubled, his heart to be amazed, and all his mercies on the right hand, and left, to be as dead and withered. Ah! were but the eyes of wicked men open to see their wants, under their abundance, they would cry out, and say as Absalon did, What are all these to me, so long as I cannot see the King's face? What's honour, and riches, and the favour of Creatures, so long as I want the favour of God, the pardon of my sins, an interestin Christ, and the hopes of glory. O Iod, give me these, or I die, give me these, or else I shall eternally die. The fift Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that outward things are not as they seem, and are esteemed; they have indeed a glorious outside, but if you view their insides, you will easily find that they fill the head full of cares, and the heart full of fears; what if the fire should consume one part of my estate, and the sea should be a grave to swallow up another part of my estate; what if my servants should be unfaithful abroad, and my children should be deceitful at home? ah the secret fretting, vexing, and gnawing, that doth daily, yea hourly, attend those men's souls, whose hands are full of worldly goods. 'Twas a good speech of an Emperor, you (said he) gaze on my purple Robe, ●nd golden Crown, but did you know what cares are under it, you would not take it up from the ground to have it. 'Twas a true saying of Augustine on the 26 Psalms, many are Multi amando res noxias sunt miseri, habendo miseriores. August. miserable by loving hurtful things, but they are more miserable by having them. It is not what men enjoy, but the principle from whence it comes, that makes men happy; much of these outward things do usually cause great distraction, great vexation, and great condemnation at last, to the posessors of them; if God gives them in his wrath, & do not sanctify them in his love, they will at last be witnesses against a man, and racks to torture and torment a man, and millstones for ever to sink a man, in that day, when God shall call men to an account, not for the use, but for the abuse of mercy. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider the end and the design of God, in heaping up mercy upon the heads of the wicked, and in giving them (a quietus est) rest Valerian the Roman Emperor, fell from being an Emperor, to be a footstool to Sapor, King of Persia. Dionysius King of Sicily, fell from his Kingly glory, to be a Schoolmaster. The brave Queen Zenobia was brought to Rome in golden chains. and quiet from those sorrows and sufferings that others sigh under. David in that 73 Psal. 17, 18, 19, 20 verses, shows the end and design of God in this, saith he, When I went into the Sanctuary of God, than I understood their end: Surely thou didst set them in slippery places: thou castedst them down into destruction. How are they brought into desolation as in a moment, they are utterly consumed with terrors. As a dream when one awaketh, so, O Lord, when thou awakest: thou shalt despise their image. So in the 92 Psal. 7. When the wicked spring as grass, and when all the workers of iniquity do flourish, it is that they shall be destroyed for ever. God's setting them up, is but in order to his casting them down; his raising them high, is but in order to his bringing them low. Exod. 9 16. And in very deed, for this cause have I raised thee up, for to show in thee my power, and that my name may Valens an Emperor, Belisarius a famous general, Henry the 4th, Bajazeth, Pythias, Great Pompey, and William the Conqueror; these from being very high, were brought very low; they all fell from great glory and majesty, to great poverty and misery Da Domine ut sic possideamus temporalia ut non perdamus aeterna. Bern. Grant us Lord that we may so partake of temporal felicity, that we may not lose eternal. be declared throughout all the earth. I have constituted and set thee up as a But-mark, that I may let fly at thee, and follow thee close with plague upon plague, till I have beaten the very breath out of thy body, and got myself a name, in setting my feet upon the neck of all thy pride, power, pomp, and glory. Ah souls! what man in his wits would be lifted up, that he might be cast down, would be set higher than others, when 'tis but in order to his being brought down lower than others. There is not a wicked man in the world, that is set up with Lucifer, as high as Heaven, but shall with Lucifer be brought down as low as Hell. Canst thou think seriously of this oh soul? and not say, O Lord, I humbly crave that thou wilt let me be little in this world, that I may be great in another world; and low here, that I may be high for ever hereafter: Let me be low, and feed low, and live low, so I may live with thee for ever; let me now be clothed with rags, so thou wilt me at last with thy Robes; let me now be set upon a dunghill, so I may at last be advanced to sit with the● upon thy Throne; Lord, make me rather gracious, then great; inwardly holy, then outwardly happy; and rather turn me into my first nothing, yea, make me worse than nothing, rather than set me up for a time, that thou mayest bring me low for ever. The seventh Remedy against this Device 7 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that God doth often most plague and punish those, whom others think he doth most spare and love; that is, God does plague and punish them most with spiritual judgements (which are the greatest, the sorest, and the heaviest) whom he least punishes with temporal punishments; there are no men on earth Psal. 81. 12. Psal. 78. 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31. Psal. 106. 15. He gave them their request, but sent leanness into their soul. 'Tis a heavy plague to have a fat body, and a lean soul; a house full of gold, and a heart full of sin. so internally plagued, as those that meet with least external plagues. Oh! the blindness of mind, the hardness of heart, the searedness of Conscience, that those souls are given up to, who in the eye of the world, are reputed the most happy men, because they are not outwardly afflicted and plagued as other men. Ah souls! 'twere better that all the temporal plagues that ever befell the children of men since the fall of Adam, should at once meet upon your souls, then that you should be given up to the least spiritual plague, to the least measure of spiritual blindness, or spiritual hardness of heart, etc. nothing will better that man, nor move that man, that is given up to spiritual judgements; let God smile or frown, stroke, or strike, cut or kill, he minds it 'Tis better to have a sore, than a seared conscience. 'Tis better to have no heart then a hard heart; no mind, than a blind mind. not, he regards it not; let life, or death, heaven, or hell, be set before him, it stirs him not, he is made up on his sin, and God is fully set to do Justice upon his soul; this man's preservation, is but a reservation unto a greater condemnation. This man can set no bounds to himself, he is become a brat of fathomless perdition. He hath guilt in his bosom, and vengeance at his back, wherever he goes; neither ministry, nor misery, neither miracle, nor mercy, can mollify his heart; and if this soul be not in hell on this side hell, who is? who is? 8 Remedy. The vl Remedy against this Device of Satan, is, to dwell more upon that strict account that vain men must make for all that good that they do enjoy, In this day men shall give an account (De bonis commissis, de bonis dimissis, de malis commissis, de malis permissis) of good things committed unto them, of good things neglected by them, of evils committed by them, and of evils suffered by them. then upon the outward good they do enjoy. Ah! did men dwell more upon that account, that they must ere long give for all the mercies that they have enjoyed, and for all the favours that they have abused, and for all the sins they have committed, would make their hearts to tremble, and their lips to quiver, rottenness to enter into their bones; it would cause their souls to cry out, and say, oh! that our mercies had been fewer, and lesser, that our account might have been easier, and our torment and misery (for our abuse of so great mercy) not greater than we are able to bear. O cursed be the day wherein the Crown of honour was set upon our heads, and the treasures of this world were cast into our laps; O cursed be the day wherein the sun of prosperity shined so strong upon us, and this flattering world smiled so much upon us, as to occasion us to forget God, to slight Jesus Christ, to neglect our souls, and to put far from us the day of our account. Philip the third of Spain, whose life was free from gross evils, professed, that he would rather lose all his Kingdom, then offend God willingly; yet being in the Agony of death, and considering more throughly of his In die judicii plus valebit conscientia pura, quam marsupia plena. Bernard. Then shall a good conscience be more worth than all the world's good. account he was to give to God, fear struck into him, and these words broke from him; Oh! would to God I had never reigned; oh that those years I have spent in my Kingdom, I had lived a life in the wilderness! oh that I had lived a solitary life with God how much more securely should I now have died? how much more confidently should I have gone to the Throne of God? What doth all my glory profit me, but that I have so much the more torment in my death. God keeps an exact account of every penny that's laid out upon him, and his, and that is laid out against him, and his; and this in the day of account, men shall know and feel, though now they wink, and Hierome still thought that that voice was in his ears (Surgite mortui & venite ad judicium) Arise you dead, and come to judgement. As oft as I think on that day, how doth my whole body quake, and my heart within me tremble? will not understand. The sleeping of vengeance, causeth the overflowing of sin, and the overflow of sin causeth the awaking of vengeance; abused mercy will certainly turn into fury; God's forbearance is no quittance; the day is at hand, when he will pay wicked men for the abuse of new and old mercies; if he seem to be slow, yet he is sure: he hath leaden heels, but iron hands; the farther he fetcheth his blow, or draweth his arrow, the deeper he will wound in the day of vengeance. men's actions are all in print in heaven, and God will, in the day of account, read them aloud, in the ears of all the world, that they may all say amen to that righteous sentence that he shall pass upon all the despisers and abusers of mercy. The ninth Device that Satan hath to 9 Device. draw the soul to sin, is, by presenting to the soul, the crosses, losses, reproaches, sorrows, and sufferings, that do daily attend those that walk in the ways of holiness. Saith Satan, do not you see that there are none in the world that are so vexed, afflicted, and tossed, as those that walk more circumspectly, and holily then their neighbours; they are a byword at home, and a reproach abroad; their miseries come in upon them, like Job's messengers, one upon the neck of another; and there is no end of their sorrows and troubles; therefore saith Satan, you were better walk in ways that are less troublesome, and less afflicted, though they be more sinful; for who but a mad man would spend his days in sorrow, vexation, and affliction, when it may be prevented, by walking in the ways that I set before him. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that all the afflictions that do attend the people of God, are such, as shall turn to the profit, and glorious advantage of the people of God; they shall discover that filthiness and vileness in sin, that yet the soul hath never seen. It was a speech of a German Divine, in his sickness; In this Disease Guspar Olevianus. I have learned how great God is, and what the evil of sin is; I never knew to purpose what God was before, nor what sin meant till now. Afflictions are a crystal glass, wherein the soul hath the clearest sight of the ugly face of sin; in this glass the soul comes to see sin to be but a bitter-sweet; yea, in this glass the soul comes to see sin, not only to be an evil, but to be the greatest evil in the world, to be an evil far worse than hell Again, they shall contribute to the Isa. 1. 25. c. 27. 8, 9 mortifying and purging away of their sins; afflictions are God's furnace, by which he cleanses his people from their dross; affliction is a fire, to purge out In times of peace our Armer is rusty, in time of war 'tis bright. our dross, and to make virtue shine; it is a potion to carry away ill humours; better than all the Benedicta Medicamentum, as Physicians call them. Aloes kills worms, colds and frosts do destroy Vermin: so do afflictions the corruptions that be in our hearts. The Jews under all the Prophets thundering, retained their Idols; but after their babylonish captivity, 'tis observed, there have been no Idols found amongst them. Again, afflictions are sweet preservatives to keep the Saints from sin, which is a greater evil than hell itself: as Job spoke, Surely it is meet to be said unto God, Job 34. 31, 32 I have borne chastisement, I will not offend any more. That which I see not, teach thou me; if I have done iniquity, I will do no more. Once have I spoken foolishly, yea, Salt brine preserves from putrefaction, and salt marshes keep the sheep from the rot: so do afflictions, the Saints from sin. twice, but I will do so no more, saith Job. The child dreads the fire; ah! saith the soul, under the rod, sin is but a bitter-sweet, and for the future I intent by the strength of Christ, that I will not buy Repentance at so dear a rate. The Rabbins to scare their scholars from sin, were wont to tell them, that sin made God's head ache; and Saints under the rod have found by woeful experience, that sin makes, not only their heads, but their hearts ache also. Augustine by wand'ring out of his way, escaped one that lay in weight to mischief him; if afflictions did not put us out of our way, we should many times meet with some sin or other, that would mischief our precious souls. Again, they will work the Saints to be more fruitful in holiness, Heb. 12. 10, 11. But he afflicts us for our profit, that The b●ll in the emblem● saith, Percussa Su●go, the harder you beat me down in affliction, the higher I shall bond in affection towards heaven and heavenly things. we might be partakers of his holiness. The flowers smell sweetest after a shower; Vines bear the better for bleeding, the Walnut-tree is most fruitful, when most beaten; Saints spring and thrive most internally, when they are most externally afflicted; afflictions are called by some, the mother of virtue. Manasses his chain was more profitable to him, than his Crown. Luther could not understand some Scriptures, till he was in affliction; the Christcross is no letter, and yet that taught him more than all the letters in the row; God's house of Schola crucis Schola lucis. correction, is his school of instruction; all the stones that came about Stevens ●ars, did but knock him closer to Christ the cornerstone. The waves did but lift Noah's Ark nearer to Heaven, and the higher the waters grew, the more near the Ark was lifted up to Heaven; afflictions do lift up the soul to more rich, clear, and full enjoyments of God, Hosea 2. 14. Behold, I will allure her into the wilderness, and speak comfortably to her (or rather, as the Hebraw hath it) I 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vedib bartignal-libbab. will earnestly, or vehemently speak to her heart. God makes afflictions to be but inlets to the soul, more sweet and full enjoyment of his blessed self. When was it that Steven saw the Heaven's open, and Christ standing at the right hand of God? but when the stones were about It is reported of Tiberius (the Emperor) that passing by a place where he saw a Cross lying in the ground upon a marble stone, and causing the stone to be ● di●ged up, ●ound a great deal of treasure under the Cross. So many a precious Saint, hath sound much spiritual and heavenly treasure under the crosses ●hey have met withal. his ears, and there was but a short step betwixt him and eternity; and when did God appear in his glory to Jacob? but in the day of his troubles, when the stones were his pillows, and the ground his bed, and the hedges his curtains, and the Heavens his Canopy; Then he saw the Angels of God ascending and descending in their glistering robes. The plant in Nazianzen grows with cutting, being cut, it flourisheth; it contends with the axe, it lives by dying, and by cutting it grows: so do Saints by their afflictions that do befall them. They gain more experience of the power of God supporting them, of the wisdom of God directing them, of the grace of God refreshing, and cheering them, and of the goodness of God quieting and quickening of them, to a greater love to holiness, and to a greater delight in holiness, and to a more vehement pursuing after holiness. I have read of a Fountain, that at noon day is cold, and at midnight it grows warm: so many a precious Saint is cold God-wards, and Heaven-wards, and Holinesse-wards, in the day of prosperity, that grow warm God-wards, and Heaven-wards, and Holinesse-wards, in the midnight of adversity. Again, afflictions serve to keep the hearts of the Saints humble and tender, Lam. 3. 19, 20. Remembering my affliction, and my misery, the wormwood, and the gall; My soul hath them still in remembrance, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and is humbled in me, or bowed down in me, as the Original hath it. So David, when he was under the rod, could say, I was dumb, I opened not my mouth, because thou didst it; I have read of one, who when any thing fell out prosperously, would read over the Lamentations of Jeremiah, Gregory Nazianzen. and that kept his heart tender, humble and low; prosperity doth not contribute more to the puffing up of the soul, than adversity doth to the bowing down of the soul; this the Saints by experience find, and therefore they can kiss, and embrace the Cross, as others do the world's Crown. Again, they serve to bring the Saints nearer to God, and to make them more importunate and earnest in prayer with God; Before I was afflicted, I went astray, Psal 119. 67. 71. Hos. 5. 14, 15. Ch. 6. 1. 2. but now have I kept thy word. It is good for me that I have been afflicted, that I might learn thy statutes. I will be to Ephraim as a Lion, and as a young Lion to the house of The more precious odours, and the purest spices are beaten and bruised, the sweeter scent and savour they send abroad: so do Saints when they a●● afflicted. Judah. I, even I will tear, and go away, I will take away, and none shall rescue him; I will go and return to my place, till they acknowledge their offence, and seek my face; in their affliction they will seek me early: and so they did, Come (say they) and let us return unto the Lord; for he hath torn, and he will heal us, he hath smitten, and he will bind us up. After two days he will revive us, in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live in his sight. So when God had hedged up their way with thorns, than they say, I will go and return Hes. 2. 6, 7. to my first husband, for than was it with me better than now. Ah the joy, the peace, the comfort, the delight, and content that did attend us, when we kept close communion with God, doth bespeak our return to God. We will return to our first Husband, for than was it with us better than now. When Tiribazus a noble Persian, was arrested, he drew out his sword, and defended himself, but when they told Most men are like atop, that will not go unless you whip it, and the more you whip it, the better it goes you know how to apply it They tha● are in advers●●y, saith▪ Luther, do better understand Scripture; but those that are in prosperity read them as a vers in Ovid. Bees are killed with honey▪ but quickened with vinegar: The honey of prosperity kills our graces, but the vinegar of adversity quickens our graces. him that they came to carry him to the King, he willingly yielded; so, though a Saint may at first stand a little out, yet when he remembers, that afflictions are to carry him nearer God, he yields, and kisses the rod. Afflictions are like the prick at the Nightingale's breast, that awakes her, and puts her upon her sweet and delightful sing. Again, afflictions they serve to revive and recover decayed graces, they infame that love that's cold, and they quicken that faith that is decaying, and they put life into those hopes that are withering, and spirits into those joys and comforts that are languishing. Musk (saith one) when it hath lost its sweetness, if it be put into the sink amongst filth, it recovers it: so do afflictions recover and revive decayed graces. The more Saints be beaten with the hammer of afflictions, the more they are made the Trumpets of God's praises, and the more are their graces revived and quickened. Adversity abases the loveliness of the world, that might entice us; it abates the justinesse of the flesh within, that might incite us to folly and vanity, and it abets the spirit in his quarrel, to the two former, which tends much to the reviving and recovering decayed graces. Now suppose afflictions, and troubles do attend the ways of holiness, yet seeing that they all work for the great profit, and singular advantage of the Saints, let no soul be so mad, as to leave an afflicted way of holiness, to walk in a smooth path of wickedness. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that all the afflictions that do befall The Christian soldier shall ever be master of the day (Mori posse vinci non posse, said Cyprian to Cornelius) he may suffer death, but never conquest. the Saints, do only reach their worse part; they reach not, they hurt not their noble part, their best part, all the arrows stick in the Target, they reach not the Conscience. And who shall harm you, if you be followers of that which is good, (saith the Apostle) that is, none shall harm you; they may thus and thus afflict you, but they shall never harm you. It was the speech of a Heathen, when as by the Tyrant he was commanded to be put into a mortar, and be beaten to pieces with an iron pestle, he cries out to his persecutors, you do but beat the vessel, the case, the ●usk of Anaxarchus, you do not beat me; his body was to him but as a case, a husk; he counted his soul himself, which they could not reach; you are wise, and know how to apply it. Socrates' said of his enemies, they may kill me, but they cannot hurt me: so afflictions may kill us, but they cannot hurt us; they may take away my life, but they cannot take away my God, my Christ, my Crown. The ●●ird Remedy against this Devi●● 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the afflictions that do attend the Saints in the ways of holiness, are but short, and momentary; Sorrow may abide for a night, but joy comes in the morning; There are none of Gods afflicted one's that have not their (lucida intervalla) intermissions, respites, and breathing while, under their short a●d momen●●●● afflictions. Wh●n God's hand is on thy back, let thy hand be on thy mouth; for though the affliction be sharp, it shall be but short. this short storm will end in an everlasting calm; this short night will end in a glorious day, that shall never have end. 'Tis but a very short time between grace and glory, between our title to the Crown, and our wearing the Crown, between our right to the heavenly inheritance, and our possessing of the heavenly inheritance. Fourteen thousand years to the Lord, is but as one day, what is our life, but a shadow, a bubble, a flower, a post, a span, a dream, etc. yea, so small a while doth the hand of the Lord rest upon us, that Luther cannot get diminutives enough to extenuate it; for he calls it a very little little cross that we bear. The Prophet in Isaiah 26. 20. (to pikron mikron) saith the indignation doth not (transire) pass, but (pertransire) overpasse. The sharpness, shortness, and suddenness of it is set forth by the travel of a woman, John 16. 21. And that is a John 16. 21. Heb. 10. 36, 37. sweet Scripture, For ye have need of patience, that after ye have done the will of God, ye might receive the promise: For yet a little while, and he that shall come, will come, and will not tarry. (Tantillum, tantillum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. adhuc pusillum) A little, little, little while. When Athanasius friends came to bewail him because of his misery and banishment, he said, It is but a little cloud, and will quickly be gone. 'Twill be but as a day before God will give his Nebecula est cito transibit. Athanasius. afflicted ones beauty for ashes, the oil of gladness, for the spirit of heaviness; before he will turn all your sighing into singing, all your lamentations, to consolations, your sackcloth into silks, ashes into ointments, and your fasts into 4 Remedy. ●verlasting feasts, etc. The fourth Remedy against this Device of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the afflictions that do befall the Saints, are such as proceed from God's dearest love. As many as I love I rebuke Austin asketh (Simo amatur quomedo infirmatur) if he were beloved, how came he to be sick? So are wicked men apt to say, because they know not that corrections are pledges of our adoption, and badges of our Son ship. God had one Son without sin, but none without sorrow. and chasten; be zealous therefore, and repent. Saints saith God, think not that I hate you, because I thus chide you; he that escapes reprehension, may suspect his adoption; God had one Son without corruption, but no Son without correction. A gracious soul may look through the darkest cloud, and see a God smiling on him. We must look through the anger of his correction, to the sweetness of his countenance, and as by a Rainbow, we see the beautiful image of the Sun's light, in the midst of a dark, and waterish cloud. When Munster lay sick, and his friends asked him how he did, and how he felt himself, he pointed to his sores and ulcers (whereof he was full) and said, these are Gods Gems, and Jewels, wherewith he decketh his best friends, and to me they are more precious than all the gold and silver in the world. A soul at first conversion is but ruf cast, but God by afflictions doth square and fit, and fashion it for that glory above, which doth speak them out, to flow from precious love; therefore the afflictions that do attend the people of God, should be no bar to holiness, nor no motive to draw the soul to ways of wickedness. The fift Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that 'tis our duty, and glory, not to measure afflictions by the smart, but by the end. When Israel was dismisled out of Exod. 11. Egypt, 'twas with gold, and earrings. So the Jews were dismissed out of Babylon, with gifts, jewels, and all necessary utensils. Look more at the latter end of a Ezra 1. Christian, than the beginning of his affliction; consider the patience of Job, and what end the Lord made with him. Look not upon Lazarus lying at Dives Afflictions they are but our father's Gold smith's, who are working to add pearls to our Crowns. door, but lying in Abraham's bosom; look not to the beginning of Joseph, who was so far from his dream, that the Sun and Moon should reverence him, that for two years he was cast where he could see neither Sun, Moon, nor Stars; but behold him at the last made Ruler over Egypt. Look not upon David, as there was but a step between him and Tiburtius saw paradise, when he walked upon hot burning coals. Heredotus said of the Assyrians, let them drink nothing but wormwood all, their life long; when they die, they shall swim in honey; you are wise and know how to apply it. 6. Remedy. death, nor as he was envied by some, and slighted and despised by others, but behold him seated in his Royal Throne, and dying in his bed of honour, and his Son Solomon, and all his glistering Nobles about him. Afflictions they are but as a dark entry into your Father's house, they are but as a dirty lane to a Royal Palace. Now tell me souls, whether it be not very great madness to shun the ways of holiness, and to walk in the ways of wickedness, because of those afflictions that do attend the ways of holiness. The sixth Remedy against this device of Satan, is seriously to consider, that the design of God in all the afflictions that do befall them, is only to try them; 'tis not to wrong them, nor to ruin them, as ignorant souls are apt to think. He knoweth the way that I take, and when he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold, saith patiented Job So in that 8. Dan. 2. And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God l●d thee, these forty years in the willdernesse, to humble thee, and to prove thee, to know what was in thy heart, whether thou The King of Aracum in Scaliger tries her whom he means to marry, by sweeting; if they be sweet, than he marries them, if not, he rejects them; you may easily make the application. wouldst keep his Commandments or no. God afflicted them thus, that he might make known to themselves, and others, what was in their hearts. When fire is put to green wood, there comes out abundance of watery stuff that afore appeared not; when the pond is empty, the mud, filth, and toads come to light. The snow covers many a dunghill; so doth prosperity many a rotten heart. It is easy to wade in a warme-bath, and every bird can sing in a sun-shine-day, etc. Hard weather tries what health we have; afflictions try what sap we have, what grace we have. Weathered leaves soon fall off in windy weather; Rotten boughs quickly break with heavy weights, etc. you are wise, and know how to apply it. Afflictions are like pinching frosts, Dunghills raked send out a filthy steam, ointment a sweet presume; this is applicable to sinners, and Saints under the rod. that will search us; where we are most unsound, we shall soon complain, and where most corruptions lie, we shall most shrink; We try mettle by knocking, if it sound well, than we like it: so God ●●ies his by knocking, and if under knocks they yield a pleasant sound, God will turn their night into day, and their bitter into sweet, and their Cross into a Crown; and they shall hear that voice, arise and shine, for the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee, and the favours of the Lord are flowing in on thee. The seventh, and last Remedy against 7. Remedy. this device of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that the afflictions, wrath, and misery that do attend the ways of wickedness, are far greater, and heavier than those are, that do attend the ways of holiness. Oh! the galling, girding, lashing, and gnawings of Conscience, that do attend souls in a way of wickedness▪ The wicked (saith Isaiah) are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters Sin oftentimes makes men insensible of the wrath of the Almighty; Sin transforms many a man, as it were into those beats in Pliny, that could not be stirred with the sharpest prickles; or those fishes in Aristotle, that though they have spears thrust into their sides, yet they awake not. cast up mire and dirt. There is no peace to the wicked, saith my God. There are snares in all ●heir mercies; and curses, and crosses do attend all their comforts, both at home, and abroad; what is a fine suit of with the plague in it? and what's a golden cup▪ when there is poison at the bottom? or what's a silken stocking with a broken leg in it? the curse of God, the wrath of God, the hatred of God, and the fierce indignation of God do always attend sinners, walking in a way of wickedness. Turn to that 28. of Deuteronomie, and read from the 15. verse, to the end of that chapter, and turn to the 26. chapter of Leviticus, and read from the 14. verse, to the end of that chapter, and then you shall see, how the curse of God haunts the wicked (as it were a fury) in all his ways; In the City it attends him, Sin brings in sorrow, and sickness, etc. The Rabbins say, that when Adam tasted the forbidden frui●, his head a●ed. in the Country it hovers over him; coming in, it accompanies him; going forth, it follows him; and is travel it is his Comrade, it fills his store with strife, and mingles the wrath of God with his sweetest morsel; It is a moth in his wardrobe, murrain among his cattle, mildew in his field, rot among sheep, and ofttimes makes the fruit of his loins his greatest vexation, and confusion. There is no solid joy, nor lasting peace, nor Sirens are said to sing curiously while they live, but to roar horribly when they die; So do the wicked. pure comfort, that doth attend sinners in their sinful ways. There is a sword of vengeance, that doth every moment hang over their heads, by a small thread; and what joy and content can attend such souls, if the eye of Conscience be but so far open, as to see the sword? ah! the horrors, and terrors, the tremble, and shake that attend their souls. The tenth Device that Satan hath, 10. Device. to draw the souls of men to sin, is, by working them to be frequent, in Non vulnera sed munera ostendit. He shows not his want, but his worth, and stands not only upon his conparisons, but upon his disparisons; I am not as this Publican. They are very good, that are not very bad; and they that are very bad, do always prise themselves above the market. comparing themselves, and their ways with those, that are reputed, or reported to be worse than themselves. By this device, the devil drew the proud Pharisee to bless himself, in a cursed condition. God, I thank thee that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this Publican etc. Why saith Satan, you swear but petty oaths, as by your faith, and troth, etc. but such, and such swear by wounds and blood; you are now and then a little wanton; but such and such do daily defile, and pollute themselves, by actual uncleanness, and filthiness; you deceive, and overreach your neighbours, in things that are but as toys, and trifles; but such and such deceive, and overreach others in things of greatest concernment, even to their ruin and undo; you do but sit, and chat, and sip with the drunkard; but such, and such sit, and drink drunk with the drunkard; you are only a little proud in heart, and habit, in looks, and words, etc. Now the Remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1. Remepy. of Satan, is solemnly to consider this, that there is not a greater, nor a clearer argument to prove a man an History speaks of a kind of witches, that stirrin abroad would put on their eyes, b●t returning home, they boxed them up again. So do Hypocrites. hypocrite, then to be quick-sighted abroad, and blind at home; then to see a mote in another man's eye, and not a beam in his own eye, then to use spectacles to behold other men's sins, rather than looking-glasses to behold his own; then to be always holding his finger upon other men's sores; then to be amplifying, and aggravating other men's sins, and mitigating of his own, etc. The second Remedy against this device. 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, to spend more time The nearer we draw to God, and his word, the more rottenness we shall find in our bones. The more any man looks into the body of the S●n, the less he seethe when he looks down again. It is said of the Basilisk, that if he look into a glass, he presently dieth: so will sin, and a sinner (in a spiritual sense) when the soul look; into the word which is God's glass, etc. in comparing of your internal, and external actions with the Rule, with that word, by which you must be judged at last, then in comparing of yourselves with those, that are worse than yourselves; that man that comparing his self with others, that are worse than himself, may seem, (to himself and others) to be an Angel; yet comparing himself with the word, may see himself to be like the devil, yea, a very devil. Have not I chosen twelve, and one of you is a Devil. Such men are as like him, as if they were spit out of his mouth. Satan is called the God of this world, because, as God at first did but speak the word, and it was done: so, if the Devil doth but hold up his finger, give the least hint, they will do his will, though they undo their souls for ever. Ah! what monsters would these men appear to be, did they but compare themselves with a righteous Rule, and not with the most unrighteous men; they would appear to be as black as Hell itself. The third Remedy against this device 3. Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that though thy sins be not as great as others, yet without sound repentance on thy side, and pardoning mercy on Gods, thou wilt be as certainly damned As in Heaven one is more glorious than another; so in Hell, one shall be more miserable than another. Augustine. as others, though not equally tormented with others; what though hell shall not be so hot to thee as to others, yet thou must as certainly to hell as others, unless the glorious grace of God shines forth upon thee in the face of Christ. God will suit men's punishments to their sins; the greatest sins shall be attended with the greatest punishments, and lesser sins with lesser punishments; alas! what a poor comfort will this be to thee, when thou comest to die, to consider, that thou shalt not be equally tormented with others, and yet must be for ever shut out from the glorious presence of God, Christ, Angels, and Saints, and from those good things of eternal life, that are so many, that they exceed number, The gate of Indulgence, the gate of hope the gate of mercy, the gate of glory, the gate of consolation, and the gate of salvation, will be for ever shu● against them, Mat. 25. 10. so great, that they exceed measure, so precious, that they exceed estimation, Sure it is, that the tears of hell are not sufficient to bewail the loss of heaven, the worm of grief gnaws as painful, as the fire burns; if those souls, Acts 20. wept, because they should see Paul's face no more? How deplorable is the eternal deprivation of the beatificallvision. But this not all, thou shalt not be only shut out of heaven, but shut up in hell for ever, not only shut out from the presence of God and Angels, etc. but shut up with devils, and damned spirit, for ever, not only shut out from 'Twas a good saying of chrysostom, speaking of Hell (Ne quaeramu● ubi sit, sed quomodo illam fugiamus) let us not seek where it is, but how we shall escape it. those sweet surpassing, unexpressabl, and everlasting pleasures that be at God's right hand, but shut up for ever under those torments, that are easeless, remediless, and endless. Ah souls! were it not ten thousand times better for ye to break off your sins by repentance, then to go on in your sins, till you feel the truth of what now you hear. The God of Israel is very merciful; ah that you would repent, and return, that your souls might live for ever. Remember this, grievous is the torment of the damned, for the bitterness of the punishments; but most grievous for the eternity of the punishments. For to be tormented without end, this is Surely, one good means to escape Hell, is to take a turn or two in Hell, by our daily meditations. that which goes beyond all the bounds of desperation; ah! how do the thoughts of this make the damned to roar, and cry out for disquietness of heart, and tear their hair, and gnash their teeth, and rage for madness, that they must dwell in everlasting burn for ever? The eleventh Device that Satan hath 11 Device. to draw the soul to sin, is, by polluting and defiling the souls and judgements of men with such dangerous errors, that do in their proper tendency tend to carry the souls of men to all looseness and wickedness, as woeful experience doth abundantly evidence. Ah! how many are there filled with these, and such like Christ-dishonouring, and soule-undoing opinions, viz. That Ordinances are poor, low, carnal things, and not only to be lived above, but without also. That the Scriptures are full of fallasies and uncertainties, and no further to be heeded, than they agree with that spirit that is in them. That 'tis a poor low thing, if not idolatry too, to worship God in a Mediator. That the Resurrection is already past. That there was never any such man or person, as Jesus Christ; but that all is an Allegory, and it signifies nothing but light and love, and such good frames borne in men. That there's no God, nor Devil, Heaven, nor Hell, but what is within us. That there is no sin in the Saints, they are under no Law, but that of the spirit, which is all freedom. That sin and grace are equally of God, and agreeth to his will: with a hundred other horrid opinions, which hath caused wickedness to break in as a flood among us, etc. Now the general Remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that an erroneous vain mind is as odious A blind eye is worse than a lame foot. Leu. 13. 44. to God, as a vicious life; he that had the leprosy in his head, was to be pronounced utterly unclean. Gross errors make the heart foolish, and render the life lose, and the soul light in the eye of God. Error spreads, and frets The breath of the erroneous is infectious, and like the dogs of Cong●, they by't though they bark not. like a Gangreen, and renders the soul a leoper in the sight of God. It was Gods heavy and dreadful plague upon the Gentiles, to be given up to a mind void of Judgement, or an injudicious mind, or a mind rejected, disallowed, abhorred of God, or a mind that none have cause to glory in, but rather to be ashamed Through animosity to persist in error, is diabolical; it were best that we never erred, next to that that we amended our error. of. I think that in these day's God doth punish many men's former wickednesses, by giving them up to soule-ruining errors. Ah Lord! this mercy I humbly beg, that thou wouldst rather take me into thine own hand, and do any thing with me, then to give me up to those sad errors, to which thousands have married their souls, and are in a way of perishing for ever. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, to receive the truth affectionately, and let it dwell in your souls plenteously; when men stand out against the truth, when truth would enter, The greatest sinners are sure to be the greatest sufferers. and men bar the door of their souls against truth, God in justice gives up such souls to be deluded, and deceived by error, to their eternal undoing▪ 2 Thess. 2. 10, 11, 12. Because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved: God shall send them strong delusions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. (or as the Greek hath it, the efficacy of error) that they should believe a lie. That they all might be damned, who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness. Ah sirs! as you love your souls, do not tempt God, do not provoke God by your withstanding truth, and outfacing truth, to give you up to believe a lie, that you may be damned. There are no men on earth so fenced against error, as those are that receive the truth in the love of it. Such souls Ephes. 4. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Gr. signifies cogging with a die; such slights as cheaters and false gamesters use at D●c●. are not easily tossed too and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the slight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive. 'Tis not he that receives most of the truth into his head, but he that receives most of the truth affectionately into his heart, that shall enjoy the happiness of having his judgement sound, and clear, when others shall be deluded, and deceived by them, who make it their business to infect the judgements and to undo the souls of men. Ah souls! as you would not have your judgements polluted, and defiled Col. 3. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. i e. indwell in you, as an engrafted word, incorporated into your souls, so concocted, and digested by you, as that you turn it into a part of yourselves. They must needs err that know not Gods way●s, yet can they not wander so wide, as to miss of hell. Veritas vincit truth (at last) triumphs. with error, let the word of the Lord that is more precious than gold, yea, then fine gold, dwell plenteously in you. 'Tis not the hearing of truth, nor the knowing of truth, nor the commending of truth, nor the talking of truth, but the indwelling of truth in your souls, that will keep your judgements chaste and sound, in the midst of all those glistering errors, that betray many souls into his hands, that can easily transform himself into an Angel of light, that he may draw others to lie in chains of darkness with him for ever. Oh! let not the word be a stranger, but make it your choicest familiar; then will you be able to stand in the day, wherein many shall fall on your right hand, and on your left, by the subtlety of those that shall say, lo here is Christ, and lo there is Christ. There was more wit, than grace, in his speech, that counselled his friend, not to come too nigh unto truth, lest his teeth should be beaten out with its heels. Ah souls! if truth dwell plenteously in Veritas stat in aperto campo. Truth stands in the open fields, I, and it makes those souls stand, in whom it dwells, when others ●all as states from Heaven. 3 Remedy. you, you are happy, if not, you are unhappy under all your greatest felicity. It is with truth, saith Melancton, as 'tis with holy water, every one praised it, and thought it had some rare virtue in it, but offer to sprinkle them with it, and they will shut their eyes, and turn away their faces from it. The third Remedy against this Device of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that error makes the owner to suffer loss! All the pains and labour that men take, to defend and maintain their errors, to spread abroad, and infect the world with their errors, shall bring no profit, nor no comfort to them in that day, wherein every man's Error as a glass, is bright, but ●rittle, and cannot ind●r● the ham●er, or fire, as go●d can which though 〈◊〉 or melted, remains 〈◊〉 and orient. work shall be made manifest, and the fire shall try it, of what sort it is, as the Apostle shows, in that remarkable Scripture, the 1 Cor. 3. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15. Ah that all those that rise early, and go to bed late, that spend their time, their strength, their spirits, their all, to advance & spread abroad God-dishonouring, and soul undoing opinions, would seriously consider of this, that they shall lose all the pains, cost, and charge, that they have been or shall be at, for the propagating of error; and if they are ever saved, it shall be by fire, as the Apostle there shows. Ah sirs! is it nothing to lay out your money for that which is not bread? and your strength for that, which will not, which cannot profit you in the day that you must make up your accounts, and all your works must be tried by fire? Ah! that such souls would now at last, buy the truth, and sell it not; Remember, you can never over buy it; whatsoever you give for it, you can never sufficiently sell it, if you should have all the world in exchange for it. It is said of Caesar, * Major fuit cura Caesari libellorum quam purpurae. that he had greater care of his Books, then of his royal Robes; for swimming through the waters, to escape his enemies, he carried his books in his hand above the waters, but lost his Robes; ah! what are Caesar's books to God's books? well, remember this, that one day, yea, one hour spent in the study of truth, or spreading abroad of truth, will yield the soul more comfort, and profit, than many thousand years spent in the study, and spreading abroad of corrupt and vain opinions, that have their rice from Hell, and not from Heaven; from the God of this world, and not from that God, that shall at last judge this world, and all the corrupt opinions of men. The fourth Kemedie against this device 4. Remedy. of Satan, is, to hate, reject, and abominate all those doctrines, and opinions, that are contrary to godliness, and that open a door to profaneness; One old piece of Gold is worth a thousand new counters, and one old truth of God is more worth than a thousand new errors. True hatred is (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) to the whole kind: 'tis sad to frown upon one error, and smile upon another. Gideon had seventy sons, and but one ●astard, and ●e● that ●astard destroyed all the rest. Judge 8. 13. one tur●e may ●ri●g a man quite out of the 〈…〉. and all such doctrines and opinions, that require men to hold forth a strictness, above what the Scripture requireth; And all such Doctrines and opinions, that do advance, and lift up corrupted nature, to the doing of supernatural things, which none can do, but by that supernatural power, that raised Christ from the grave; And all such opinions, that do lift up our own Righteousness, in the Room of Christ's Righteousness, that place good works in the Throne of Christ, and makes them copartners with Christ, etc. And all those opinions, and Doctrines, that do so set up, and cry up Christ and his Righteousness, as to cry down all Duties of Holiness, and Righteousness; And all those Doctrines and opinions, that do make the glorious and blessed privileges of believers in the days of the Gospel, to be lesser, fewer, and weaker, than they were in the time of the Law. Ah! did your souls arise with a holy hatred, and a strong indignation against such Doctrines and opinions, you would st●nd when others fall, and you would shine as the Sun in her glory, when many, that were once as shining stars, may go forth as stinking snuffs The fift Remedy against this device 5. Remedy. of Satan, is, to hold fast the truth; as men take no hold on the arm of flesh, till they have let go their hold on Jer. 17. 5. v, the arm of God: so men take no hold on error, till they have let go their hold of truth; therefore hold fast the truth, truth is thy Crown, hold fast thy Crown, and let no man take thy Crown from thee; hath not God made 2 Tim. 1. 13. 1 Titus 9 The Priests of Mercury when they eat their figs, and honey, cried ou● (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) sweet is truth. truth sweet to thy soul? yea, sweeter than the honey, or the honey comb, and wilt thou not go on ●o Heaven, feeding upon truth, that heavenly honeycomb, as Samson did of his honeycomb. Ah souls! have you not found truth sweetening your spirits, and cheering your spirits, and warming your spirits, and raising your spirits, and corroborating your spirits; have you not found truth a guide to lead you, a staff to uphold you, a cordial to strengthen you, and a plaster to heal you? and will you not hold fast the truth? hath not truth been your best friend in your worst days? hath not truth stood by you, when friends have forsaken you? hath not truth done more for you, than all the world could do against you, and will you not hold fast the truth? is not truth your right eye, without which you cannot see for Christ? and your right hand, without which you cannot do for Christ? and your right foot, without which you cannot walk with Christ? and will you not hold fast truth? oh! hold fast the truth in your judgements, and understandings, in your wills and affections, in your profession, It is with truth, as with some plants, which live, and thrive not, but in warm climates. and conversation. Truth is more precious than gold, or Rubies; and all the things thou canst desire, are not to be compared to her. Truth is that heavenly glass, wherein we may see the lustre, and glory of divine wisdom, power, greatness, love, and mercifulness. In this glass, you may see the face of Christ, the favour of Christ, the riches of Christ, and the heart of Christ, beating and working sweetly towards your souls. Oh! let your souls cleave to truth, as Ruth Ruth 1. v. 15, 16, 17. Though I cannot dispute for the truth, yet I can die for the truth, said that blessed Ma●●yr. did to Naomi, and say, I will not leave truth, nor return from following after truth, but where truth goes, I will go, and where truth lodgeth I will lodge, and nothing but death shall part truth and my soul. What John said to the Church of Philadelphia, I may say to you; Hold th●● fast which thou hast, that no man take thy Crown, the Crown is the top of royalties; such a thing is truth; let Tit. 1. v. 9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. no man take thy Crown; Hold fast the faithful word, as Titus speaks; you were better let go any thing than truth; you were better let go your Hold fast as with tooth, and nail, against those that would snatch it from us. honours, and riches, your friends, and pleasures, and the world's favours; yea, your nearest, and dearest relations, I, your very lives, then to let go truth. Oh! keep the truth, and truth will keep you safe, and happy for 6. Remedy. I have read of one, who seeing in a vision, many snares of the devil spread upon the earth, he sat down mourning, and said, within himself (Quis periransiet ista) who shall pass through these? whereunto he he●d a voice answering (humilitas▪ periransiet) humility shall pass through them. ever, blessed are those souls that are kept by truth. The sixth Remedy against this device of Satan, is, to keep humble; humility will keep the soul free from many darts of Satan's casting, and erroneous snares of his spreading. As low trees and shrubs are free from many violent gusts, and blasts of wind, which shake and rend the taller trees; so humble souls are free from those gusts, and blasts of error, that rend, and tear proud lofty souls; Satan and the world hath least power, to fasten errors upon humble souls. The God of light and truth delights to dwell with the humble; and the more light and truth dwells in the soul, the further off darkness and error will stand from the soul. The God of grace pours in grace into humble souls, as men pour liquor into empty vessels, and the more grace is poured into the soul, the less error shall be able to overpower the soul, or to infect the soul That's a sweet word in the Psa. 25. v. 9 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gnanavim from gnanah, which signifies, the humble, or afflicted. The high tide quickly ebbs, and the highest Sun is presently declining; you know how to apply it. 25. Psal. 9 v. The meek (or the humble) will he guide in judgement, and the meek will he teach his way; and certainly souls guided by God, and taught by God, are not easily drawn aside, into ways of error. Oh! take heed of spiritual pride; pride fills our fancies, and weakens our graces, and makes room in our hearts for error; there are no men on earth so soon entangled, and so easily conquered by error, as proud souls. Oh! 'tis dangerous, to love to be wise above what is written; to be curious, and unsober in your desire of knowledge, and to The proud soul is like him that gazed upon the Moon, but fell into the pit. trust to your own capacities and abilities, to undertake to pry into all secrets, and to be puffed up with a carnal mind; souls that are thus a soaring up, above the bounds and limits of humility, usually fall into the very worst of errors, as experience doth daily evidence. The seventh Remedy against this device 7. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, the great evils that errors have produced; error is a fruitful mother, and hath brought forth such monstrous Errors in conscience produce many great evils, not only (ad intra) in men's own souls, but also (ad extra) in humane affairs. children, as hath set Towns, Cities, and Nations on fire. Error is that whorish woman, that hath cast down many, wounded many, yea, slain many strong men, and many great men, and many learned men, and many professing men in former times, and in our own time, as is too evident to all, that are not much left of God, destitute of the truth, and blinded by Satan. Oh the graces that error hath weakened, and the sweet joys and comforts that error hath clouded, if not buried; oh! the hands that error hath weakened; the eyes that error hath blinded; the judgements of men that error hath perverted; the minds that error hath darkened; the hearts that error hath hardened; the affections that error hath cooled; the Consciences that error hath s●ared; and the lives of men, that error hath polluted; ah souls! can you solemnly consider of this? and not tremble more at error then at hell itself, etc. The twel●th Device that Satan hath 12. Device. to draw the soul to sin, is, to affect wicked company, to keep wicked society, and oh! the horrid impieties and wickednesses that Satan hath drawn men to sin by working them, to sit, and associate themselves with vain persons. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1. Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell (till your hearts be affected) upon those commands of God, that do expressly require us, to shun the society of the wicked, Ephes. 5. 11. And have no fellowship Non paerentum aut majorum authoritas sed Dei docentis imperium, Jerom. The commands of God must outweigh all authority, and example of men. with the unfruit fud works of darkness, but rather reprove them. Prov. 4. 14, 15, 16. Enter not into the path of the wicked, and go not in the way of evil men. Avoid it, pass not by it, turn from it, and pass away. 1 Cor. 5. 9, 10, 11. 2 Thess. 3. 6. Prov. 1. 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15. turn to these Scriptures, and let your souls dwell upon them, till a holy indignation be raised in your souls, against fellowship with vain men. God will not take the wicked by the hand, as Job speaks, why then should you? God's commands are not like those that are easily reversed; but they are like those of the Medes, that cannot be changed; if these commands be not now observed by thee, they will at last be witnesses against thee, and millstones to sink thee, in that day, that Christ shall judge thee. The second Remedy against this device 2. Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that their company is very infectious, Eusebius reports of John the Evangelist, that he would not suffer Cerinthus the heretic, in the same bath him, left some judgement should abide them both. Euseb. lib. 3. cap. 25. A man that keepeth ill company, is like him that walketh in the Sun, tanned insensibly. and dangerous, as is clear from the Scriptures above mentioned. Ah! how many have lost their names, and lost their estates, and strength, and God, and Heaven, and souls, by society with wicked men? As ye eat a stinking carcase; as the Seaman shuns sands, and rocks, and shelves; As ye eat those, that have the plague-sore running upon them: so should you shun the society of wicked men. As weeds endanger the corn, as bad humours endanger the blood, or as an infected house the neighbourhood: so doth wicked company the soul. Bias a heathen man, being at Sea in a great storm, and perceiving many wicked men with him in the ship, calling upon the Gods; oh saith he, forbear prayer, hold your tongues, I would not have the Gods take notice that you are here, they will sure drown us all; if they should. Ah sirs! could a heathen Prov. 13. 20. v. see so much danger in the society of wicked men, and can you see none? The third Remedy against this device 3. Remedy. 2 Tim. 4. 17. Isa. 11. 7. 29. Ezek. 3. 10. Mat. 16. 9 Revel. 3. 5. 10. Mat. 3. 7. Isa 10. 17. 27. ch 4. 55. 13. Ezek 26. Judg. 9 14. Job 21. 18. Psal. 18. 42. Psa. 14. 18. Psa. 42. Ezek. 22. 18, 19 65. Esa. 5. Ezek 24. 6. Lactantius saith of Lucian (nec diis, nec hominibus pepercit) he spared neither God, nor man; such monsters are wicked men, which should render their company to all that have tasted of the sweetness of divine love, a burden and not a delight. of Satan, is, to look always upon wicked men, under those names and notions, that the Scripture sets them out under. The Scripture calls them Lions for their fierceness, and Bears for their cruelty, and Dragons for their hideousness, and Dogs for their filthiness, and Wolves for their subtleness. The Scripture styles them Scorpions, Vipers, Thorns, Briars, Thistles, Brambles, stubble, dirt, chaff, dust, dross, smoke, scum; as you may see in the margin. 'Tis not safe to look upon wicked men, under those names, and notions, that they set out themselves by, or that flatterers sets them out by; this may delude the soul; but the looking upon them under those names, and notions, that the Scripture sets out by, may preserve the soul from frequenting their company, and delighting in their society. Do not tell me what this man calls them, or how such and such count them; but tell me, how doth the Scripture call them? how doth the Scripture count them. As Naballs' name was, so was his nature; and as wicked men's names are, so are their natures; you may know well enough what is within them, by the apt names that the Holy Ghost hath given them. The fourth and last Remedy against 4. Remedy. O Lord, let me not go to hell, where the wicked are, for Lord, thou knowest, I never loved their company here, said a gracious gentlewoman, when she was to die, being in much trouble of conscience. this device of Satan, is, to consider, that the society and company of wicked men, have been a great grief and burden, to those precious souls, that were once glorious on earth, and are now triumphing in heaven. Psal. 120. ver. 5, 6. Woe is me that I dwell in Mesech; that I sojourn in the tents of Kedar. My soul hath long dwelled with him that hateth peace. So Jeremiah, Oh that I had in the wilderness a lodging place of wayfaring men, that I might leave my people, and go from them; for they be all adulterers, an assembly of treacherous men, Jer. 9 ver. 2. So they vexed Lots 2 Pet. 2. c. ver. 7, 8 Vide Bezam. righteous soul by their filthy conversation; they made his life a burden, they made death more desirable to him then life; yea, they made his life a linger death. Gild, or grief is all the good, souls get by conversing with wicked men. The second thing to be showed is, the several Devices that Satan hath (as to draw souls to sin, so) to keep souls from holy duties, to hinder souls in holy Services, and to keep them off from Religious performances. And he shown me Joshua the high Priest, standing before the Angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right-hand to resist him. Zach. 3. 1. The truth of this I shall show you in the following particulars. The first device that Satan 1. Device. hath to draw souls from holy duties, and to keep them off from religious services is, BY presenting the world in such a dress, and in such a garb to the soul, as to ensnare the soul, and to win upon the affections of the soul; The beauty of the world soils a Christian more than the strength; the flattering Sun sh●ne more than the blustering storm; in storms, we keep our garments close about us. he represents the world to them in its beauty, and bravery, which proves a bewitching sight to a world of men. 'Tis true, this took not Christ, because Satan could find no matter in him for his temptation to work upon; but Satan finds matter in us, for this temptation to work upon: so that he can no sooner cast out his golden bait, but we are ready to play with it, and to nibble at it; he can no sooner throw out his golden ball, but men are apt to run after it, though they lose God, and their souls in the pursuit. Ah! how many Professors in these days, have for a time followed hard after God, Christ, and The inhabitants of Nilus are deaf by the noise of the waters: so the world makes such a noise in men's ears, that they cannot hear the things of Heaven. The world is like the swallows dung, that put out Tobias eyes. Ordinances, till the Devil hath set before them the world, in all its beauty, and bravery, which hath so bewitched their souls, that they have grown to have low thoughts of holy things, and then to be cold in their affections to holy things, and then to slight them, and at last, with the young man in the Gospel to turn their backs upon them; ah the time! the thoughts, the spirits, the hearts, the souls, the duties, the services, that the inordinate love of this wicked world doth eat up, and destroy, and hath eat up, and destroyed; where one thousand is destroyed The champions could ●or wring an Apple out o● M●l●'s ha' 〈◊〉 by strong hand, but a fair maid by fair means got it presently. by the world's frowns, ten thousands are destroyed by the world's smiles. The world Siren-like, it sings us, and sinks us; it kisses us, and betrays us, like Judas; it kisses us, and imites us under the fifth rib, like Joab. The honours, splendour, and all the glory of this world are but sweet poisons, that will much endanger us, if they do not eternally destroy us. Ah! the multitude of souls that have surseited of these sweet baits, and died for ever. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1 Remedy. The Prior in Melancton 〈◊〉 his hands up and down in a ba●●n full of ●●●ells, thinking thereby to have charmed 〈◊〉 gour, but 〈◊〉 would not ●oe. of Satan, is to dwell upon the impotency, and weakness of all these things below; they are not able to secure you from the least evil. They are not able to procure you the least desirable good. The Crown of Gold cannot cure the headache; nor the velvet slipper ease the gout; nor the Jewel about the n●ck cannot take away the pain of the teeth. The Frogs of Egypt entered into the rich men's houses of Egypt, as well as the poor; our daily experience doth Nugas the Scythian despiseing the rich presents, and ornaments that were sent unto him by the Emperor of Constantinople, asked whether▪ those things could drive away calamities, diseases, or death. evidence this, that all the honours, and riches, etc. That men enjoy cannot free them from the colic, the fever, or lesser diseases. Nay, that which may seem most strange is, that a great deal of wealth cannot keep men from falling into extreme poverty. In the first of Judges 6. ver. you shall find seventy Kings with their fingers and toes cut off, glad like whelps to lick up crumbs under another King's table; and shortly after, the same King that brought them to this penury, is reduced to the same poverty and misery; Why then should that be a bar to keep thee out of Heaven, that cannot give thee the least ease on earth? The second Remedy against this device 2. Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell upon the vanity of them, as well as upon the impotency of all worldly good. This is the sum of Solomon's sermon; Vanity of vanity, and all is vanity. This Gilimex King of Vandals, led in triumph, by Bellisarius, cried out, Vanity of vanity, all is vanity. our first parents found, and therefore named their second Abel, or vanity. Solomon that had tried these things, and could best tell the vanity of them, he preacheth this sermon over, again, and again; Vanity of vanity, and all is vanity. 'Tis sad to think, how many thousands there be, that can say with the preacher, vanity of vanity, all is vanity, The fancy of Lucian, who placeth Charon on the top of an high hill, viewing all the affairs of men living, and looking on their greatest Cities as little birds nests, is very pleasant. nay, swear it, and yet follow after these things, as if there were no other glory, nor selicity; but what's to be found in those things, they call vanity. Such men will sell Christ, Heaven, and their souls for a trifle, that call these things vanity, but do not cordially believe them to be vanity, but set their hearts upon them, as if they were their Crown, the top of all their Royalty, and glory. Oh! let your souls dwell upon the vanity of all things here below, till your hearts be so thoroughly convinced, and persuaded of the vanity of them, as to trample upon them, and make them a a footstool for Christ to get np, and ride in a holy triumph in your hearts. Oh the imperfection, the ingratitude, the le●ity, the inconstancy, the perfidiousness of those creatures▪ we most servilly affect. chrysostom said once, that if he were the fittest in the world, to preach a Sermon to the whole world, gathered together in one Congregation, and had some high Mountain for his Pulpit, from whence he might have a prospect of all the world in his view, and were furnished with a voice of brass, a voice as loud as the Trumpet of the Archangel, that all the world might hear him, he would choose to preach upon no other text, then that in the Psaln●es, O mortal men how long will ye love vanity, and follow after leasing. Ah! did we but weigh man's pain with his payment, his crosses, with his mercies; his miseries with his pleasures; we should then see that there is nothing got by the bargain, and conclude, Vanity of vanity, all is vanity. Tell me, you that say all things under the Sun is vanity, if you do really believe what you say, why do you spend more though●●, and time on the world, than you do on Christ, Heaven, and your immortal souls? Why do you then neglect your duty towards God, to get the world? Why do you then so eagerly pursue after the world? and are so cold in your pursuing after God, Christ, and holiness? Why then are your hearts so exceedingly raised, when the world comes in, and smiles upon you, and so much dejected, and castdown, when the world frowns upon you, and with Jonah's Gourd withers before you? The third Remedy against this device 3. Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell much upon the uncertainty, the mutability, and inconstancy of all things under the Sun. Riches were never true to any, that trusted to them; they have deceived men, as Jobs brook did the poor traveller, in the Summer season. Man himself is but the dream of a dream, but the generation of a fancy, but an empty vanity, but the curious picture of nothing, a poor, feeble, dying flash. All temporals are as transitory, as a hasty, headlong torrent, a shadow, a ship, a bird, an arrow, a post that passeth by; why shouldest thou set thine eyes upon that which is not, saith Solomon: and saith the Apostle, the fashion of this world passeth away. Heaven 1 Cor. 7. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intimateth, that there is nothing of any firmness, or solid consistence in the creature. only hath a foundation, earth hath none, but is hanged upon nothing, as Job speaks. The Apostle willed Tymothie, to charge rich men that they be not high minded, nor put their trust in uncertain riches. They are like bad servants, whose shoes are made of running leather, and will never tarry long with one Master; as a bird hoppeth from tree to tree, so do the honours and riches of this world, from man to man; let Job and Nabuchadnezzar testify this truth, who fell The most renowned Frederick lost all, and sued to be made but Sexton of the Church, that himself had built. I have re●d of a poor fisherman, who while his nets were ad●ying, slept upon the Rock, and dreamt that he was made a King, on a sudden starts up, and leaping for joy, falls down f●o● the Rock, and in the place of his imaginary felicities, loses his little portion of pleasures. from great wealth, to great want. No man can promise himself to be wealthy till night; one storm at Sea, one coal of fire, one false friend, one unadvised word, one false witness may make thee a beggar, and a prisoner all at once. All the riches and glory of this world is but as smoke, and chaff that vanisheth; as a dream, and vision in the night that tarrieth not; as if an hungry man dreameth, and thinketh that he eateth, and when he awaketh, his soul is empty; and like a thirsty man, which thinketh he drinketh, and behold when he is awaked, his soul is faint, as the Prophet Esay saith. Where is the glory of Solomon? the sumptuous buildings of Nabuchadnezzar? the nine hundred Chariots of Sisera? the power of Alexander? the authority of Augustus, that commanded the whole world to be taxed? Those that have been the most glorious, in what men generally account glorious and excellent, have had inglorious ends; As Samson for strength; Absolom for beauty; Achitophel for policy; Hamon for favour; Asael for swiftness; Alexander for great conquest, and yet after twelve years poisoned; the same you may see in the mighty four Kingdoms. The Caldean, Persian, Grecian, and Roman, The pomp of this world john compareth to the Moon, which (crescit & decrescit) increaseth, and decreaseth. Apoc. 12. v. 1. how soon were they gone, and forgotten. Now rich, now poor, now full, now empty, now in favour, anon out of favour, now honourable, now despised, now health, now sickness, now strength, now weakness. Oh! let not these uncertain things keep thee from those holy services, and heavenly employments, that may make thee happy for ever, and render thy soul eternally blessed, and at ease, when all these transitory things shall bid thy soul an everlasting farewell. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4. Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that the great things of this world are very hurtful, and dangerous to the outward and inward man, through the Henry the second hearing Menz his chief City to be taken, used this blasphemous speech, I shall never (saith he) love God any more, that suffered a City so dear to me, to be taken from me. When one presented Antipater King of Macedonia, with a book, treating of happiness, his answer (ou scholazo) I have no leisure. corruptions that be in the hearts of men; oh! the rest, the peace, the comfort, the content that the things of this world do strip many men off. Oh the fears, the cares, the envy, the malice, the dangers, the mischiefs, that they subject men to. They oftentimes make men carnally confident. The rich man's riches are a strong tower in his imagination. I said in my prosperity I should never be moved. They often swell the heart with pride, and make men forget God, and neglect God, and despise the Rock of their salvation; when Jesurum waxed fat, and was grown thick, and covered with fatness, than he forgot God, and forsook God that made him, and lightly esteemed the Rock of his salvation, as Moses spoke; ah the time! the thoughts, the spirits, that the things of the world consumes and spends. Oh! how do they hinder the actings of faith upon God? how do they interrupt our sweet communion with God? how do they abate our love to the people of God, and cool our love to the things of God, and work us to act like those, that are most unlike to God? oh! the deadness, the dulness, the barrenness, that doth attend 〈…〉 n under great outward mercies. Oh! the riches of the world chokes That four good mothers beget four bad daughters; great familiarity begets contempt; truth hatred; virtue envy; riches ignonorance; is a french Proverb. Gen. 13. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polycrates bestowed five talents for a gift, upon one Anacrion, who for two nights after was so troubled with care, how to keep them, and how to bestow them, as he carried them back again to Polycrates, saying, they were not worth the pains which he had already taken for them the word, that men live under the most soul-searching, and soul in riching means with lean souls; though they have full purses, though their chests are full of silver, yet their hearts are empty of grace. In the 13. Gen. 2. It is said that Abraham was very rich in cattles, in silver, and in gold, according to the Hebrew (Chabbedh) 'tis Abraham was very heavy, to show that riches are a heavy burden, and a hindrance many times to heaven, and happiness. King Henry the fourth asked the Duke of Alva, if he had observed the great Eclipse of the Sun, which had lately happened, no (said the Duke) I have so much to do on earth, that I have no leisure to look up to Heaven; ah! that this were not true of most Professors in these days; 'tis very sad to think, how their hearts and time is so much taken up with earthly things, that they have scarce any leisure to look up to Heaven, or to look after Christ, and the things that belong to their everlasting peace. Riches, though well got, yet are but like to Manna, those that gathered less bad no want, and those that gathered more, 'twas but a trouble, and annoyance to them. The world is troublesome, and yet it is loved; what would it be, if it were peaceable? you embrace it, though it be filthy; what would you do, if it were beautiful? you cannot keep your hands from the thorns; how earnest would you be then in gathering the flowers? The world may be fitly likened to the Serpent Scytale, whereof it is reported, that Sicily is so full of sweet flowers, that dogs cannot hunt there; and what do all the sweet contents of this world, but make us lose the sent of Heaven. when she cannot overtake the flying passengers, she doth with her beautiful colours so astonish, and amaze them, that they have no power to pass away, till she have stung them. Ah! how many thousands are there now on earth, that have found this true by experience; that have spun a fair thread to strangle themselves, both temporally and eternally, by being bewitched by the beauty, and bravery of this enticeing world. The fift Remedy against this Device of 5. Remedy. Satan, is, to consider, that all the felicity of this world is mixed; our light is mixed with darkness, our joy with sorrow, our pleasures with pain, our honour with dishonour, our riches with wants. If our fight be spiritual, clear, and quick; we may see in the felicity of this world, our wine mixed with water, our honey with gall, our sugar with wormwood, and our roses with prickles. Sorrow attends worldy joy, Hark scholar, said the Harlot to Apuleius; 'tis but a bitter sweet, that you are so fond off. Surely, all the things of this world are but bitter sweets. danger attends worldly safety, loss attends worldly labours, tears attend worldly purposes. As to these things, men's hopes are vain, their sorrow certain, and joy feigned. The Apostle calleth this world a sea of glass; a sea for the troubles of it, and glass for the brittleness and bitterness of it. The honours, profits, pleasures, and delights of this world are true gardens of Adonis, where we can gather nothing but trivial flowers, surrounded with many briers. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6. Remedy. of Satan, is, to get better acquaintance, and better assurance of more blessed, and glorious things. That Let Heaven be a man's object, and earth will soon be his abject. which raised up their spirits, in the t●nth and 11th of the Hebrews, to trample upon all the beauty, bravery, and glory of the world, was their acquaintance with, and assurance of better and more durable things. They took joyfully the spoiling of their goods, knowing in themselves, that they had in Heaven a better, and a more durable substance. They Luther being at one time in some wants, it happened that a good sum of money was unexpectedly sent him, by a Noble man of Germany, at which being something amazed, he said, I sear that God will give me my reward here; but I protest, I will not be so satisfied. looked for a house that had foundations, whose builder and maker was God; And they looked for another Country, even an heavenly. They saw him that was invisible, and had an eye to the recompense of reward; And this made them count all the glory and bravery of this world, to be poor, and contemptible for them, to set their hearts upon. The main reason why men dote upon the world, and damn their souls to get the world, is, because they are not acquainted with a greater glory. Men ate Acorns, till they were acquainted with the use of wheat. Ah! were men more acquainted with what union and communion with God means; what 'tis to have a new name, and a new stone, that none knows, but he that hath it; did they but taste more of Heaven, and live more in Heaven, and had more glorious hopes of going to Heaven; ah! how easily would they have the Moon under their feet. It was an excellent saying of Lewis of Bavyer, Emperor of Germany, * Hujusmodi comparandae sunt opes quae cum naufragio simul enatent. such goods are worth getting, and owning as will not sink, or wash away, if a shipwreck happen, but will wade and swim out with us. It is recorded of Lazarus, that after his resurrection from the dead, he was never seen to laugh, his thoughts and affections were so fixed in Heaven, though his body was on earth; and therefore he could not but slight temporal things, There is saith Augustine (bona Throni) goods of the throne; and there are (bona Scabelli) goods of the foote-stool. his heart being so bend, and set upon eternals. There are goods of the throne of grace; as God, Christ, the Spirit, Adoption, Justification, remission of sin peace with God, and peace with Conscience; and there are goods of the footstool, as honours, riches, the favour of creatures, and other comforts, and accommodations of this life; Now he that hath acquaintance with, and assurance of the goods of the Throne, will easily trample upon the goods of the footstool. Ah! that you would make it your business, your work, to mind more, and make sure more to your own souls, the great When Basil was tempted with money, and preferment; saith he, give me money that may last for ever, and glory that may eternally flourish; for the fashion of this world passeth away, as the waters of a river that runs by a City. things of eternity, that will yield you joy in life, and peace in death, and a Crown of Righteousness in the day of Christ's appearing; And that will lift up your souls above all the beauty, and bravery of this bewitching world; that will raise your feet above other men's heads. When a man comes to be assured of a Crown, a Sceptre, the Royal Robes, etc. he than gins to have low, mean, and contemptible thoughts of those things, that before he highly prized: so will assurance of more, great, and glorious things breed in the soul a holy scorn, and contempt of all these poor, mean things, which the soul before did value above God, Christ, and Heaven, etc. The seventh Remedy against this device of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, 7 Remedy. that true hahpinesse and satisfaction, is not to be had in the enjoyment of any worldly good; true happiness is too big, and too glorious a thing, to be True happiness lies only in our enjoyment of a suitable good, a pure good, a total good, & an eternal good; and God is only such a good, and such a good can only satisfy the soul of man. found in any thing below that God, who is a Christians (summum bonum) chiefest good. The blessed Angels, those glistering Courtiers have all felicities, and blessednesses; and yet they have neither gold, nor silver, nor jewels, nor none of the beauty, and bravery of this world; certainly, if happiness was to be found in these things, the Lord Jesus, who is the right and Royal Heir of all things, would have exchanged his cradle for a Crown, his Birthcham-ber (a stable) for a Royal Palace; his poverty for plenty; his despised followers, for shining Courtiers; and his mean provisions, for the choicest delicates, etc. Certainly, happiness lies not in those things, that a man Philosopher's could say, that he was never a happy man that might afterwards become miserable. may enjoy, and yet be miserable for ever; now a man may be great, & graceless with Pharaoh; honourable, and damnable with Saul; rich, and miserable with Dives, etc. therefore happiness lies not in these things. Certainly happiness lies not in those things that cannot comfort a man upon a dying bed; Is it honours, riches, or friends, etc. that can comfort thee when thou comest to die? or is it not rather faith in the blood of Christ? the witness of the Gregory the great used to say, he is poor, whose soul is void of grace, not whose coffers are empty of money. spirit of Christ; the sense and feeling of the love, and favour of Christ, and the hopes of eternal reigning with Christ? Can happiness lie in those things that cannot give us health, or strength, or ease, or a good night's rest, or an hours sleep, or a good stomach? why all the honours, riches, and delights of this world cannot give these poor things to us; therefore certainly, happiness lies not in the enjoyment of them, etc. And surely happiness is not to be found in those things, that cannot satisfy the souls of men; now none of these things can satisfy the soul of man. He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied with silver, nor he that loveth abundance Anima rationalis caeteris omnibus occupari potest impleri non potest. The reasonable soul may be busied about other things, but it cannot be filled with them. with increase; this is also vanity, saith the wise man. The barren womb, the Horseleeches daughter, the grave and Hell will as soon be satisfied, as the soul of man will by the enjoyment of any worldly good. Some one thing, or other will be for ever wanting to that soul that hath none, but outward good to live upon. You may as soon fill a bag with wisdom, a chest with virtue, or a circle with a triangle, as the heart of man with any thing here below? A man may have enough of the world to sink him, but he can never have enough to satisfy him, etc. The eighth Remedy against this device 8. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider of the dignity of the soul; oh! the soul of man is more wotrh than a thousand worlds; 'tis the greatest abasing of it Plutarch tells of Themistocles, that he accounted it not to stand with his state, to stoop down to take up the spoils the enemies had scattered in flight, but saith to one of his followers. (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) you may, for you are not Themistocles. Oh what a sad thing is it, that a Heathen should set his feet upon those very things that most Professors set their hearts, and for the gain of which with Balaam, many run the hazard of sing their immortal souls for ever. that can be, to let it dote upon a little shining earth, upon a little painted beauty, and fading glory, when it's capable of union with Christ, of communion with God, and of enjoying the eternal vision of God. Seneca could say, I am too great, and born to greater things, then that I should be a slave to my body; oh! do you say, my soul is too great, and born to greater things, then that I should confine it to a heap of white and yellow clay. I have been the longer upon the Remedies, that may help us against this dangerous device of Satan, because he doth usually more hurt to the souls of men, by this device, than he doth by all other devices; for a close, I wish, as once chrysostom did, that that sentence, Eccles. 2. v. 11. (Then I looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and on the labour that I had laboured to do, and behold all was vanity and vexation of Spirit, and there was no profit under the Sun) were engraven on the door posts, into which you enter; on the tables, where you sit; on the dishes out of which you eat; on the cups, out of which you drink; on the bedsteads, where you lie; on the walls of the houses, where you dwell; on the garments, which you wear; on the heads of the horses, on which you ride, and on the foreheads of all them whom you meet; that your souls may not by the beauty, and bravery of the world be kept off from those holy, and heavenly services, that may render you blessed, while you live, and happy when you die; that you may breathe out your last into his bosom, who lives for ever, and who will make them happy for ever, that prefers Christ's spirituals and eternals above all temporal, transitory things. The second Device that Satan hath to draw souls from holy duties, and to keep them off from religious services, is, BY presenting to them the danger, 2 Device. the losses, and the sufferings that do attend the performance of such and such religious services; by this device Satan kept close those that believed on Christ, from confessing of Christ, in that 12. John 42. Nevertheless, among the chief Rulers also, many believed on him; but because of the Pharisees, they did not confess him, lest they should be put out of the Synagogue. I would walk in all the ways of God, I would give up myself to the strictest ways of holiness; but I am afraid dangers will attend me on the one hand; and losses, and happily such, and such sufferings on the other hand, saith many a man. Oh! how should we help ourselves against this temptation, and device of Satan. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that all the troubles and afflictions that you meet with in a way of righteousness, shall never hurt you; they shall never harm you. And who is he that shall harm Nemo proprie l●d●ur nisi● a seipso. No body is properly hurt, but by himself, and his own fault. you, if you be followers of that which is good, saith the Apostle, i. e. none shall harm you; natural conscience cannot but do homage to the image of God, stamped upon the natures, words, works, and lives of the godly; as we may see in the carriage of Nabuchadnezzar, and Gordius that blessed Martyr accounted it a loss to him, not to suffer many kinds of tortures; he saith, tortures are but trade with God for glory. The greater the combat is, the greater is the following reward. Darius towards Daniel. All the afflictions and troubles that do attend men in a way of righteousness, can never rob them of their treasure, of their jewels; they may rob them of some light, slight things; as the sword that is by their side, or the stick that is in their hand, or of the flowers, or ribbons that be in their hats; The treasures of a Saint is the presence of God, the favour of God, union and communion with God; the pardon of sin, the joy of the spirit, the peace of Conscience, which are Jewels that none can give, but Christ, nor none can take away, but Christ. Now, why should a gracious soul keep off from a way of holiness? because of afflictions, etc. when no afflictions can strip a man of his heavenly jewels, which are his ornaments, and his safety here, and will be his happiness and glory hereafter. Why should that man be afraid, or troubled for That was a notable speech of Luther, let him that died for my soul, see to the salvation of it. storms at Sea, whose treasures are sure in a friend's hand upon land? why, a believers treasure is always safe in the hands of Christ; his life is safe, his soul is safe, his grace is safe, his comfort is safe, and his Crown is safe in the hand of Christ. I know him in 2 Tim. 1. 12. whom I have believed, and that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him, until that day, saith the Apostle. The child's most precious things are most secure in his Father's hands; so are our souls, our graces, and our comforts, in the hand of Christ. The second Remedy against this device 2. Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that other precious Saints, that were shining Will: Flower (Martyr) said, that heaven should assoon fall, as I will forsake my profession, or budge in the least degree from it. So Sanctus being under as great torment as you have read of, cries out (Christianus sum) I am a Christian; no torment could work him to decline the service of his God. I might produce a cloud of witnesses; but if these do not work you to be noble and brave, I am afraid more will not. lights on earth, and are now triumphing in Heaven, have held on in religious services, notwithstanding all the troubles and dangers that have surrounded them; Nehemiah, and Ezra were surrounded with dangers on the left hand, and on the right; and yet in the face of all, they hold on building the Temple, and the wall of Jerusalem: so Daniel, and those precious worthies, in the 44 Psal. under want of outward encouragements, and in the face of a world of very great discouragements, their souls clavae to God, and his ways; Though they were sore broken in the place of dragons, and covered with the shadow of death; yea, though they were all the day long counted as sheep for the slaughter, yet their hearts were not turned back, neither did their steps decline from his ways. Though bonds and imprisonment did attend Paul, and the rest of the Apostles in every place; yet they held on in the work, and service of the Lord; and why then should you degenerate from their worthy examples, which is your duty, and your glory to follow. The third Remedy against this device 3. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that all the troubles, and dangers that do attend the performance of holy duties, and heavenly services, are but temporal, and momentary; but the neglect of them may lay thee open, to all temporal, spiritual, and eternal dangers. How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation? He saith not, if we reject, or renounce so great salvation; but if we neglect, or shift off (as the word is) so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Disregard, not care for it. great salvation; he doth not say, how shall we escape, if we oppose, or persecute so great salvation? no, but if we let slip, or neglect so great salvation, how shall we escape? that is, we cannot by any way, or means, or device in the world, escape; divine Justice will be above us, in spite of our very souls. The doing of such, and such heavenly services may lay you open to the frowns of men; but the neglect of them will lay you open to the frowns of God; the doing of them may render you contemptible in the eyes of men; Francis Xaverius counselled John the third, King of Portugal, to meditate every day a quarter of an hour upon that Text, What shall it profit a man to gain the whole world, & lose his soul. but the neglect of them may render you contemptible in the eyes of God; the doing of them may be the loss of thy estate; but the neglect of them may be the loss of God, Christ, Heaven, and thy soul for ever; the doing of them may shut thee out from some outward, temporal contents; the neglect of them may shut thee out from that excellent, matchless glory, that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive. Remember this, there is no man that breaths, but shall suffer more, by neglecting those holy, and heavenly services that God commands, commends, and rewards, then possibly he can suffer by doing of them, etc. The fourth Remedy against this device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider this, that God knows how to deliver from troubles, by troubles; from afflictions, by afflictions; from dangers, by dangers; God by lesser troubles and afflictions doth oftentimes deliver his people from greater: So that they shall say, we had perished, if we had not perished; we had been undone, if we had not been P●riissem nisi periissem. undone; we had been in danger, if we had not been in danger; God will so order all the afflictions that befall you in the way of righteousness, that your Non essem ego salvus nisi istae periissent. Anaxagoras, had not these things perished, I could not have been safe, said this Philosopher, when he saw great possessions that he had lost. souls shall say, we would not for all the world, but that we had met with such, and such troubles, and afflictions; for surely, had not these befallen us, it would have been worse, and worse with us; Oh! the carnal security, pride, formality, dead-heartedness, lukewarmness, censoriousness, and earthliness, that God hath cured us of, by the troubles and dangers that we have met with, in the ways and services of the Lord. I remember a story of a godly man, that as he was going to take shipping for France, he broke his leg, and it pleased Providence so to order it, that the ship that he should have gone in, at that very time, was cast away, and not a man saved; so by breaking a bone, his life was saved. So the Lord many times breaks our bones, but 'tis in order to the saving of our lives, and our souls for ever; he gives us a potion that makes us heartsick, but 'tis in order to the making us perfectly well, and to the purging of us from those ill humours, that have made our heads ache, and God's heart ache, and our souls sick, and heavy to the death, etc. Oh! therefore, let no danger, or misery hinder thee from thy duty. The fifth Remedy against this device of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that you shall gain more in the service of God, and by walking in righteous, and holy ways, though troubles and afflictions should attend you, than you can possibly suffer, or lose, by your being found in the service of God. Godliness is great gain; Oh the joy, the peace, Tertullian in in his book to the Martyrs, hath an apt saying (Negotiatio est aliquid amittere ut majora lucreris) i. e. that's right, & good merchandise when something is parted with to gain more, he applieth it to their sufferings, wherein, though the flesh lost something, yet the spirit got much more. the comfort, the rest, that Saints meet with in the ways and service of God; they find that Religious services are not empty things, but things, in which God is pleased to discover his beauty and glory to their souls. My soul thirsts for God (saith David) that I might see thy beauty, and thy glory, as I have seen thee in thy Sanctuary. Oh! the sweet looks, the sweet words, the sweet hints, the sweet joggings, the sweet influences, the sweet love-letters, that gracious souls have from Heaven, when they wait upon God, in holy and heavenly services, the least of which will darken, and outweigh all the bravery and glory of this world, and richly recompense the soul for all the troubles, afflictions, and dangers, that have attended it in the service of God; oh! the Saints can say under all their troubles, and afflictions, that they have meat to eat, and drink to When the Moble General Ze●slaus had lost his hand in the Wars of the K. of Poland, the King sent him a golden hand for it; what we lose in Christ's service, he will make up, by giving in some golden mercies. drink, that the world knows not of; that they have such incomes, such refreshments, such warmings, etc. that they would not exchange for all the honours, riches, and dainties of this world: Ah! let but a Christian compare his external losses with his spiritual, internal, and eternal gain, and he shall find, that for every penny that he loses in the service of God, he gains a pound; and for every pound that he loses, he gains a hundred; for every hundred lost, he gains a thousand; we lose pins in his service, and find pearls; we lose the favour of the creature, and peace with the creature, and happily the comforts and contents of the creature; and we gain the favour of God, peace with conscience, and the comforts and contents of a better life; Ah! did the men of this world know the sweet that Saints enjoy in afflictions, they would rather choose Manasses iron chain, than his golden Crown; They would rather be Paul a prisoner, than Paul raped up in the third Heaven; for light afflictions, they shall have a Though the Cross be bitter, yet 'tis but short, a little storm, as one said of julian's persecution, and an eternal calm follows. weight of glory; for a few afflictions, they shall have those joys, pleasures, and contents, that are as the stars of heaven, or as the sands of the sea, that cannot be numbered; for momentany afflictions, they shall have an eternal Crown of glory; 'tis but winking, and thou shalt be in heaven presently, said the Martyr; oh! therefore, let no afflictions, nor troubles work thee to shun the ways of God, or to quit that service, that should be dearer to thee then a world, yea then thy very life, etc. The third Device that Satan 3. Device. hath to hinder souls from holy and heavenly services, from gracious, and religious performances, is, BY presenting to the soul the difficulty of performing them; saith Satan, 'tis so hard and difficult a thing to pray as thou shouldst, and to wait on God as thou shouldst, and to walk with God as thou shouldst, and to be lively, warm, and active in the communion of Saints, as thou shouldst, that you were better ten thousand times to neglect them, then to meddle with them; and doubtless by this Device Satan hath, and doth keep off thousands from waiting on God, and from giving to him that service that is due to his name, etc. Now the remedies against this Device are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1. Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell more upon the necessity of the service, and duty, then on the difficulty that doth attend the duty; you should reason thus with your souls; oh! our souls, though such and such duties and services be hard, and difficult, yet are they not exceeding necessary for the honour of God, and the keeping up of his name in The necessity of doing your duty, appears by this, that you are his servants by a threefold right; you are his servants (jure creationis, jure sustentationis, jure redemptionis) by right of creation, and by right of sustentation, and by right of redemption. the world? and the keeping under of sin, and the keeping under of weak graces, and for the reviving of languishing comforts, and for the keeping clear and bright your blessed evidences, and for the scattering of your fears, and for the raising of your hopes, and for the gladding the hearts of the righteous, and stopping the mouths of unrighteous souls, who are ready to take all advantages, to blaspheme the name of God, and throw dirt and contempt upon his people, and ways? oh! never leave thinking on the necessity of this, and that duty, till your souls be lifted up far above all the difficulties that do attend religious duties. The second Remedy against this device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that the Lord Jesus will make his services easy to you, by the sweet discovery of himself to your souls, whilst you are in his service. Thou meetest him that rejoiceth, and worketh righteousness, those that remember thee in thy ways, as the Prophet Isaiah saith; if meeting with Isa. 64. v. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Paganta is diversely taken; but most take the word here, to meet a soul with those bowels of love and tenderness as the Father of the Prodigal met the Prodigal with. God is pater miserationum, he is all bowels, he is as swift to show mercy, as he is slow to anger. God, who is goodness itself, sweetness itself, beauty itself, strength itself, glory itself, will not sweeten his service to thy soul, nothing in Heaven or Earth will. Jacob's meeting with Rachel, and enjoying of Rachel, made his hard service to be easy, and delightful to him; and will not the souls enjoying of God, and meeting with God, render his service to be much more easy and delightful? doubtless it will. The Lord will give that sweet assistance, by his Spirit and grace, as shall make his service joyous, and not grievous, a delight, & not a burden; a Heaven, and not a Hell to believing souls; the confidence of this divine assistance raised up Nehemiah's spirit, far above all those difficulties, and discouragements that did attend him in the work and service of the Lord, as you may see in that 2 Nehemiah, vers. 19, 20. But when Sanballat Luther spoke excellently to Melancthon, who was apt to be disconraged with doubts and difficulties, & fears from foes, and so ●ease the service they had undertaken; if the work be not good, why did we ever own it; if it be good? why should we ever decline it? why saith he, should we fear the conquered world that have Christ the Conqueror on our side? Isa. 40. ult. 3. Remedy. It is not fit sigh the head was crowned with thorns, that the members should be crowned with rosebuds, saith Zanch. the Horonite, and Tobiah the servant, the Ammonite, and Geshem the Arabian heard it, they laughed us to scorn, and despised us, and said, what is this thing that ye do? will ye rebel against the King? Then answered I them, and said unto them, the God of heaven he will prosper us, therefore we his servants will arise, and build: but you have no right, nor portion, nor memorial in Jerusalem. Ah souls! while you are in the very service of the Lord, you shall find by experience, that the God of Heaven will prosper you, and support you, and encourage, and strengthen you, and carry you through the hardest service, with the greatest sweetness and cheerfulness that can be. Remember this, that God will suit your strength to your work, and in the hardest service you shall have the choicest assistance. The third Remedy against this device of Satan, is, to dwell upon the hard and difficult things that the Lord Jesus Christ hath passed through, for your temporal, spiritual, and eternal good. Ah! what a sea of blood? a sea of wrath? of sin, of sorrow, and misery did the Lord Jesus wade through, for your internal and eternal good? Christ did not plead, this Cross is too heavy for me to bear, this wrath is too great for me to lie under, this Cup (which hath in it all the ingredients of divine displeasure) is too bitter for me to sip off, how much more to drink the very dregs of it? no, Christ stands not upon this; he pleads not the difficulty of the service, but resolutely, and bravely wades through all, as the Prophet Isa shows: The Lord God hath opened my ear, and I was not rebellious, neither turned away back. I gave my back to the smiters, and my cheeks to them that plucked off the hair; I hide not my face from shame and spitting. Christ makes nothing of his Father's wrath, the burden of your sins, the malice Godfrey of Bullen first K. of jerusalem, refused to be crowned with a crown of gold, saying, it became not a Christian there to wear a crown of gold, where Christ for our salvation had sometime were a crown of thorns. of Satan, and the rage of the world, but sweetly and triumphantly passes through all. Ah souls! if this consideration will not raise up your spirits, above all the discouragements that you meet with, to own Christ and his service, and to stick, and cleave to Christ, and his service; I am afraid nothing will. A soul not stirred by this, not raised, and lifted up by this, to be resolute and brave in the service of God, notwithstanding all dangers and difficulties, is a soul left of God to much blindness, and hardness. The 4. Remedy against this Device of 4. Remedy. Satan, is, to consider, that religious duties, holy and heavenly exercises are only difficult to the worse, to the ignoble part of a Saint; they are not to the noble, and better part of a Saint, to the noble part, the soul, and the renewed affections of a Saint; holy exercises are a heavenly pleasure, and recreation, as the Apostle speaks, I delight in the Law of God, after the inward As every flower hath its sweet savour, so every good duty carries meat in the mouth, comfort in the performance of it. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. my yoke is a benign, a gracious, a pleasant, a good, and a gainful yoke, opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, painful, tedious. man. With my mind I serve the Law of God, though with my flesh the law of sin. To the noble part of a Saint, Christ's yoke is easy, and his burden is light; all the commands and ways of Christ (even those that tend to the pulling out of right eyes, and cutting off of right hands) are joyous, and not grievous to the noble part of a Saint; all the ways and services of Christ are pleasantness (in the abstract) to the better part of a Saint; a Saint, so far as he is renewed, is always best, when he sees most of God, when he tastes most of God, when he is highest in his enjoyments of God, and most warm, and lively in the service of God; oh! saith the noble part of a Saint, that it might be always thus; oh! that my strength were the strength of stones, and my flesh as brass, that my worse part might be more serviceable to my noble part, that I might act by an untired power in that service, that is a pleasure, a Paradise to me. The fifth Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that great reward, and glorious recompense that doth attend those that cleave to the service of the Lord, in the Basil speaks of some Martyrs that were cast out all night naked, in a cold frosty time, & were to be burned the next day, how they comforted themselves in this manner; The winter is sharp, but Paradise is sweet; here we shiver for cold, but the bosom of Abraham will make amends for all. face of all difficulties, and discouragements; though the work be hard, yet the wages is great, Heaven will make amends for all, I, one hours being in heaven will abundantly recompense you for cleaving to the Lord, and his ways, in the face of all difficulties. This carried the Apostle through the greatest difficulties; he had an eye to the recompense of reward; he looked for a house that had foundations, whose builder and maker was God, and for a heavenly country; yea, this bore up the Spirit of Christ, in the face of all difficulties and discouragements: Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him, endured the Cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the Throne of God. Christians that would hold on in the service of the Lord, must look more upon the Crown, then upon the Cross; more upon their future glory, than their present misery; more upon their encouragements, then upon their discouragements. God's very service is wages, his ways are strewed with roses, and paved with joy that is unspeakable, This is praemium ante praemium, a sure reward of well doing, in doing thereof (not only for doing thereof) there is great reward, Psal. 19 v. 11. and full of glory, and with peace that passeth understanding. Some degree of comfort follows every good action; as heat accompanies fire, as beams and influences issue from the Sun. Moreover by them is thy servant warned, and in keeping of them there is great reward; not only for keeping, but in keeping of them, there is great reward; the joy, the rest, the refreshing, the comforts, the contents, the smiles, the incomes that Saints now enjoy in the ways of God, are so precious and glorious in their eyes, that they would not exchange them for ten thousand worlds; Ah! if the veils be thus sweet and glorious before payday comes, what will be that glory, that Christ will crown his Saints with, for cleaving to his service in the face of all difficulties: When he shall say to his father, Lo here am I, and the children which thou hast given me; if there be so much to be had in a wilderness, what then shall be had in Paradise? etc. The fourth Device that Satan 4 Device. hath to keep souls off from holy exercises, from religious services, is, BY working them to make false inferences, from those blessed and glorious things that Christ hath done; As that Jesus Christ hath done all for us; therefore there is nothing for us to do, but to joy, and rejoice, he hath perfectly justified us, and fulfilled the Law, and satisfied divine Justice, and pacified his Father's wrath, and is gone to Heaven to prepare a place for us, and in the mean time, to intercede for us; and therefore away with praying, and mourning, and hearing, etc. Ah! what a world of Professors hath Satan drawn in these days, from religious services, by working them to make such sad, wild, and strange inferences, from the sweet and excellent things, that the Lord Jesus hath done for his beloved ones. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1. Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell as much on those Scriptures that show you the duties and services that Christ requires of you, as upon those Scriptures that declare Tertullian hath this expression of the fullness of the Scriptures (Adoro plenitudinem Scripturarum) I adore the fullness of the Scripture. Gregory calls the Scripture (cor & animam Dei: the heart & soul of God and who will not then dwell on it? to you, the precious and glorious things that Christ hath done for you. 'Tis a sad, and a dangerous thing, to have two eyes to behold our dignity, and privileges, and not one eye to see our duties, and services. I should look with one eye upon the choice and excellent things that Christ hath done for me, to raise up my heart, to love Christ with the purest love, and to joy in Christ, with the strongest joy, and to lift up Christ above all, who hath made himself to be my all. And I should look with the other eye upon those services and duties, that the Scriptures require of those, for whom Christ hath done such blessed things, as upon that of the Apostle; What, know ye not that your body 1 Cor. 6. 19, 20. is the Temple of the holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are Gods. And that 1 Cor. 15. 58. therefore my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. And that, And let us not be weary in well doing, for in due Gal. 6. 9 2. season we shall reap, if we faint not. And that of the Apostle, rejoice always, and pray without ceasing; and that in the Philippians: Work out your salvation with Phil. 2 12, 13 1 Cor. 11. 26. Heb 10. 24, 25. fear and trembling; and that, This do till I come; and that, Let us consider one another, to provoke one another to love, and to good works; not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manor of some The Jews were much in turning over the leaves of the Scripture; but they did not weigh the matter of them, John 5. 39 You search the Scripture, Gr. there seemeth to be indicative, rather than imperative. is, but exhorting one another, and so much the more, as you see the day approaching. Now a soul that would not be drawn away by this device of Satan, he must not look with a squint eye upon these blessed Scriptures, and abundance more of like import; but he must dwell upon them, he must make these Scriptures to be his chiefest, and his choicest companions, and this will be a happy means to keep him close to Christ, and his service in these times, wherein many turn their backs upon Christ, under pretence of being highly interested in the great and glorious things that have been acted by Christ, etc. The second Remedy against this Device 2. Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that the great and glorious things that Jesus Christ hath done, and is a doing for us, should be so far from taking us off from religious services, and pious performances, that they should be the greatest motives and encouragements to the performance of them that may be, as the Scriptures do abundantly evidence. I 1 Pet. 2. 9 Luke 1. 74, 75. This I am sure of, that all man's happiness here is his holiness, and his holiness shall hereafter be his happiness, Christ hath therefore broke the Devil's yoke from off our necks, that his Father might have better service from our hearts. 2 Cor. 6. 6. 17, 18. ch. 7. 1. compared. will only instance in some, as that, That we being delivered out of the hands of our Enemies, might serve him without fear; in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our lives; Christ hath freed you from all your Enemies, from the curse of the Law, the predominant damnatory power of sin, the wrath of God, the sting of death, and the torments of hell; but what is the end and design of Christ in doing these great and marvellous things for his people? 'tis not that they should throw off duties of righteousness and holiness, but that their hearts may be the more free, and sweet in all holy duties, and heavenly services: So the Apostle; I will be their God, and they shall be my people: And I will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty (mark what follows) Having therefore these promises (dearly beloved) let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh, and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord. And again, The grace of God that Yet. 2. 11, 12, 13, 14. bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men. Teaching us, that denying all ungodlinsse, and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world; Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious Tace lingua loquere vita, talk not of a good life, but let thy life speak. Your actions in passing pass not away; for every good work is a grain of seed for eternal life. appearing of the great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works. Ah souls! I know no such arguments to work you to a lively and constant performance of all heavenly services, like those that are drawn from the consideration of the great and glorious things that Christ hath done for you; and if such arguments will not take ye, and win upon ye, I do● think the throwing of hell fire in your faces will never do it. The third Remedy against this device 3. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that those precious souls which Jesus Christ The Saint's Motto in all ages hath been (Laboremus) let's be doing. hath done, and suffered as much for, as he hath for you, have been exceeding active and lively in all religious services, and heavenly performances; he did as much, and suffered as much for David, God loves (curristas, not quaristas) the runner, not the questioner, or disputer, saith Luther. a● for you, and yet, who more in praying, and praising God then David? seven times a day will I praise the Lord; who more in the studying, and meditating on the word, than David. Thy law is my meditation day and night. The same truth you may run, and read in Jacob, Moses. Job, Daniel, and in the rest of the holy Prophets, and Apostles, for whom Christ hath done as much for, as for you; ah! how have all those Worthies abounded in works of righteousness, and holiness, to the praise of free grace? Certainly Satan hath got the upper hand of those souls, that do argue thus; The day is at hand when God will require of men non quid legerint, sed quid egerint, nec quid dixerint, sed quomodo vixerin●. He that talks of heaven, but doth not the will of God, is like him that gazed upon the Moon, but fell into the pit. Christ hath done such and such glorious things for us: therefore we need not make any care or conscience of d●ing such and such religious services, as men say the word calls for; if this Logic be not from Hell, what is? ah! were the holy Prophets and Apostles alive, to hear such Logic come out of the mouths of such as profess themselves to be interested in the great and glorious things that Jesus Christ hath done for his chosen one's; how would they blush to look upon such souls? and how would their hearts grieve, and break within them, to hear the language, and to observe the actings of such souls. The fourth Remedy against this device 4. Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider this, that those that do not walk in ways of righteousness and holiness (that do not wait upon God in the several duties and services that are commanded by him) cannot have that evidence to their own souls of their righteousness before God, of their fellowship and communion Certainly 'tis one thing to judge by our graces, another thing to rest, or put our trust in them. There is a great deal of difference betwixt declaring and deserving. on with God, of their blessedness here, and their happiness hereafter, as those souls have, that love and delight in the ways of the Lord, that are always best, when they are most in the works and service of the lord Little children (saith the Apostle) let no man deceive you; he that doth righteousness, is righteous even as he is righteous. In this (saith the same Apostle) the children of God are manifest, and the children of the Devil; whosoever doth not righteousness is not of God, neither he As David's daughters were known by their garments of divers colours, so are Gods children by their piety and sanctity. that loveth not his brother. If ye know that he is righteous (saith the same Apostle) ye know that every one that doth righteousness is born of him. He that saith I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But who soever keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected, hereby know we that we are in him. He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also to walk, even as he A Christians emblem should be an house walking towards Heaven▪ High words surely make a man neither holy, nor just; but a virtuous life, a circumspect walking makes him dear to God. A tree that is not fruitful is for the fire. Christianity is not a talking, but a walking with God, who will not be put off with words, if he miss of fruit, he will take up his axe, and then the soul is cut off for ever. walked. If we say that we have fellowship with him, and walk i● darkness, we lie, and do not the truth; but if we walk in the light as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another; and the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin, saith the same Apostle. So James in his second chapter; What doth it profit, my brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have no works, can faith save him? i. e. it cannot; for as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead. To look after holy and heavenly works, is the best way to preserve the soul from being deceived, and deluded by Satan's delusions, and by sudden flashes of joy and comfort, holy works being a more sensible and constant pledge of the precious spirit, begetting and maintaining in the soul more solid, pure, clear, strong and lasting joy. Ah souls! as you would have in yourselves a constant, and blessed evidence of your fellowship with the Father, and the Son; and of the truth of grace, and of your future happiness; look that you cleave close to holy services, and that you turn not your backs upon religious duties. The fifth Remedy against this device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that 'Tis a precious truth never to be forgotten (Quod non actibus, sed finibus pensantur officia) that duties are esteemed not by their acts, but by their ends. there are other choice and glorious ends for the Saints performance of religious duties, then for the justifying of their persons before God, or for their satisfying of the Law, or justice of God, or for the purchasing of the pardon of sin, etc. viz. to testify their justification; a good tree cannot but bring forth good fruit, to testify their love to God, and their sincere obedience to th● commands of God, to testify their deliverance from spiritual bondage, to evidence the indwellings Finis move● ad agendum, the end moves to doing. of the spirit, to stop the mouths of the worst of men, and to glad those righteous souls, that God would not have sadded. These, and abundance of other choice ends there be, why those that have an interest in the glorious do of Christ, should notwithstanding that, keep close to the holy duties, and religious services that are commanded Tene mensuram & respice sinem, keep thyself within compass, and have an eye always to the end of thy life and actions was Maximimilians the Emperor's Motto. by Christ. And if these considerations will not prevail with you, to wait upon God in holy and heavenly duties, I am afraid, if one should rise from the dead, his arguments would not win upon you, but you would hold on in your sins, and neglect his service, though you lost your souls for ever, etc. The fifth Device that Satan 5. Device. hath to draw souls off from religious services, and to keep souls off from holy duties, and heavenly performances, is, BY presenting to them the paucity, and poverty of those that walk in the ways of God, that hold on in religious practices; saith Satan, do not you see that those that walk in such and such religious ways, are the poorest, the John 47, 48, 49. verses. meanest, and the most despicable persons in the world; this took with them in that seventh of John. Then answered the Pharisees, are ye also deceived? Have any of the rulers, or of the Pharisees believed on him? But this people who knoweth not the law are cursed. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1. Remedy. Do you not see (saith chrysostom) the places where treasures are hid, are rough, and overgrown with thorns. Do not the naturalists tell you, that the mountains that are big with gold within, are bare of grass without. Saints have as Scholars, poor commons here, because they must study hard to go to heaven. of Satan, is, to consider, that though they are outwardly poor, yet they are inwardly rich; though they are poor in temporals, yet they are rich in spirituals; the worth and riches of the Saints is inward: The King's daughter is all glorious within. Harken my beloved brethren, hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith, and heirs of the Kingdom, which he hath promised to them that love him, saith James. I know thy poverty, but thou art rich, saith John to the Church of Smyrna. What though they have little in possession, yet they have a glorious Kingdom in reversion. Fear not little flock, 'tis your Father's pleasure to give you a Kingdom. Though Saints have little in hand, yet they have much in hope; you count those happy in a worldly sense, that have much in reversion, though they have but little in possession; and will you count the Saints miserable, because they have little in hand? little in possession? though they have a glorious Kingdom in reversion of this. I am sure, the poorest Saint that breaths will not exchange (were it in his power) that which he hath in hope, and in reversion, for the possession of as many worlds, as there be stars in Heaven, or sands in the Sea, etc. The second Remedy against this device 2. Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that in all ages God hath had some that have been great, rich, wise, and honourable, that have chosen his ways, and cleaved to his service in the face of all difficulties, Good Nobles (saith one) are like black swans, and thinly scattered in the firmament of a state, even like stars in the first magnitude, yet some God hath had in all ages, as might be showed out of Histories. though not many wise men, yet some wise men have; and though not many mighty, yet some mighty have; and though not many noble, yet some noble have; witness Abraham, and Jacob, and Job, and several Kings, and others that the Scriptures speak of; and ah! how many have we among ourselves, whose souls have cleaved to the Lord, and who have swum to his service, through the blood of the slain, and who have counted their lives dear unto them, that they and others might enjoy the holy things of Christ, according to the mind and heart of Christ, etc. The third Remedy against this device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that the spiritual riches of the poorest Saints do infinitely transcend the temporal riches of all the wicked men in the Alexander's vast mind enquired, if there were any more worlds to conquer. world; their spiritual riches do satisfy them, they can sit down satisfied with the riches of grace that be in Christ; without honours, and without riches, etc. He that drinks of that water that I shall give him, shall thirst no more. The riches of poor Saints are durable, they will bed and board with them, they Crassus' was so rich, that he maintained an Army with his own revenues, yet he, his great Army, with his son and heir sell together, and left his great estate to others. will go to the Prison, to a sick bed, to a grave, yea to Heaven with them. The spiritual riches of poor Saints are as wine, to cheer them; and as bread to strengthen them, and as to warm them, and as Armour to protect them. Now all you that know any thing, do know, that the riches of this world cannot satisfy the souls of men, and they are as fading as a flower, or as the owners of them are, etc. The fourth Remedy against this device 4 Remedy. is, seriously to consider, that though the Saints considered comparatively are few, though they be a little, little flock, a Luke 12. 32. remnant, a garden enclosed, a spring shut up, Cant. 4. 12. a fountain sealed; though they are as the Summer glean, though they are one of a City, and two of a Tribe; though they be jer. 3. 14. but a handful to a house-full; a spark to a flame, a drop to the Ocean; yet consider them simply in themselves, and so they are an innumerable number that cannot be numbered, as John speaketh. After this I beheld, and lo a great multitude which no man could number, of all Nations, Rev. 7. 9 and kindred, and people, and tongues, stood before the Throne, and before the Lamb clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands. So Matth. speaks; And I say Mat. 8. 11. Hebr. 12. 22, 23. When Fulgentius saw the Nobility of Rome sit mounted in their bravery, it mounted his meditation to the heavenly Jerusalem. unto you, that many shall come from the East, and West, and shall sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven. So Paul: But ye are come unto mount Zion, and unto the City of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of Angels. To the general assembly, and Church of the first borne, which are written in Heaven, and to God the judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect. The fifth Remedy against this device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that 'twill be but as a day, before these poor despised Saints shall shine brighter than the Sun in her glory; 'twill not be long before you will wish, oh! that we were now among the poor, mean, despised one's, in the day that God comes to make up his jewels. 'Twill not be long before these poor few Saints shall be lifted up upon their Thrones to judge the multitude, the world, as the Apostle speaks: Know ye not that the Saints shall judge the world? and in that day? oh! how will the great, and the rich, the Mr. Fox being once asked whether he knew a certain poor man, who had received succour of him in time of trouble, he answered, I remember him well, I tell you I forget Lords & Ladies to remember such. So will the Lord deal by his poor S 'tis. he will forget the great and mighty ones of the world, to remember his few, poor, despised one's. Though john was poor in the world, yet▪ the holy ghost calls him the greatest that was born of women; ah poor Saints! men that know not your worth cannot have such low thoughts of you, but the Lord will have a● high. learned, and the noble wish, that they had lived, and spent their days with these few, poor, contemptible creatures in the service of the Lord? oh! how will this wicked world curse the day, that ever they had such base thoughts of the poor, mean Saints, and that their poverty became a stumbling block, to keep them off from the ways of sanctity. I have read of Ingo an ancient King of the Draves, who making a stately feast, appointed his Nobles, at that time Pagans, to sit in the Hall below, and commanded certain poor Christians, to be brought up into his Presence-chamber, to sit with him at his Table, to eat and drink of his Kingly cheer; at which many wondering, he said, he accounted Christians, though never so poor, a greater ornament at his Table, and more worthy of his company, than the greatest Peers unconverted to the Christian faith; for when these might be thrust down to Hell, those might be his Consorts, and fellow Princes in Heaven; you know how to apply it. Although you see the stars sometimes by their reflictions, in a puddle, or in the bottom of a Well, I in a stinking ditch, yet the stars have their situation in Heaven: So, though you see a godly man in a poor, miserable, low, despised condition, for the things of this world, yet he is fixed in Heaven, in the Region of Heaven. Who hath raised us up (saith the Apostle) and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus. Oh! therefore, say to your own souls (when they begin to decline the ways of Zion, because of the poverty and paucity of those that walk in them) the day is at hand, when these few, poor, despised Saints shall shine in glory, when they shall judge this world, and when all the wicked of the world will wish that they were in their condion, & would give ten thousand worlds (were it in their power) that they might but have the honour, and happiness to wait upon those, whom for their poverty and paucity they have neglected and despised in this world. The sixth and last Remedy against this 6 Remedy. device of Satan, is, solemnly to consider that there will come a time even in this These following Scriptures do abundantly confirm this truth. jer. 31. 12. Isa. 30. 23. Isa. 62. 8, 9 joel 2. 23, 24. Mica 4. 6. Amos 9 13, 14. Zech. 8. 12. Isa. 41. 18, 19 Isa. 55. 13. Isa. 66. 6, 7. Isa. 65. 21, 22. Isa. 61. 4. Isa. 60. 10. Ezek. 36. 10. life, in this world, when the reproach and contempt that is now cast upon the ways of God, by reason of the poverty and paucity of those that walk in those ways, shall be quite taken away, by his making them the head, that have days without number been the tail, and by his raising them up to much outward riches, prosperity, and glory, who have been as the outcast, because of their poverty and paucity. John speaking of the glory of the Church, the new Jerusalem that came down from Heaven, in that 21. of the Revelation, tells us, That the Nations of them which are saved, shall walk in the light of it, and the Kings of the earth do bring their glory into it. So the Prophet Isaiah: They shall bring their sons from far, and their silver and their gold with Only take these 2 cautions. First, that in these times the Saints chiefest comforts, delights, and contents will consist in their more clear, full, and constant enjoyments of God. 2. That they sha● have such an abundant ●easure of he spirit poured out ●pon them, ●hat their riches and outward glory shall not be s●ares to ●hem, but golden steps to lead them to a richer living in God. them, vers. 9 For brass I will bring gold, and for iron I will bring silver, and for wood brass, and for stones Iron, vers. 19 And so the Prophet Zechariah speaks, Chap. 14. v. 14. And the wealth of all the heathen round about shall be gathered together, gold, and silver, and apparel in great abundance. The Lord hath promised that the meek shall inherit the earth: And heaven and earth shall pass away, before one jot or tittle of his word shall pass unfulfilled; Ah poor Saints! now some thrust sore at you, others look a squint upon you, others shut the door against you, others turn their backs upon you; and most of men (except it be a few that live much in God, and are filled with the riches of Christ) do either neglect you, or despise you, because of your poverty; but the day is coming, when you shall be lifted up above the dunghill, when you shall change poverty for riches, your rags for robes, your reproach for a crown of honour, your infamy for glory, even in this world. And this is not all, but God will also mightily increase the number of his chosen one's; multitudes shall be converted to him. Who hath heard such a Isa. 66. 8. thing? who hath seen such things? shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a Nation be borne at once? for assoon as Zion traveled, she brought forth children. And they shall bring all your brethren for an offering unto the Lord out of all Nations, upon Vers. 19, 20. horses, and in Chariots, in Litters, and upon Mules, & upon swift beasts to my holy mountain Jerusalem, saith the Lord; as the children of Israel bring an offering in a clean vessel into the house of the Lord. Doth not the Scripture say, that the Kingdoms of Revel. 11. 15. this world must become the Kingdoms of our Lord? Hath not God given to Christ the heathen? and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possessions? Hath not the Lord said, that in the last days, the mountain of the Lords Psal. 2. 8. house shall be lifted up above the hills, and shall be established in the top of the mountains, and all Nations shall flow unto it. Pray read Isa. 2. 2. Isa. 54. 14. & Isa. 61. 9 and meditate upon the sixty chapter of Isaiah, and the sixty sixth chapter, and the five first verses of the second chapter of Isaiah, and there you shall find the multitudes that shall be converted to Christ; and oh! that you would be mighty in believing, and in wrestling with God, that he would hasten the day of his glory, that the reproach that is now upon his people and ways, may cease. The sixth Device that Satan 6 Device. hath to keep souls off from religious services, is, BY presenting before them the examples john 4. 12. 7. Chap. 48, 49. 1▪ Cor. 1. 26, 27. Mica 7. 2, 3, 4. of the greatest part of the world that walk in the ways of their own hearts, and that make light and slight of the ways of the Lord; why saith Satan, do not you see, that the great, and the rich, the noble and the honourable, the learned and the wise, even the greatest number of men never trouble themselves about such and such ways, and why then should you be singular and nice▪ you were far better do as the most do, etc. Now the remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider of those Scriptures that make directly against following the sinful examples of men; as that in Exodus, Thou shalt not The way to hell is broad, and well beaten, the way▪ to be undone for ever, is to do as the most do, (argumentum turpissimum est turba) the multitude is the weakest and worst argument, saith Seneca. follow a multitude to do evil, neither shalt thou speak in a cause to decline after many to wrest judgement. The multitude generally are ignorant, and know not the way of the Lord: therefore they speak evil of that they know not, they are envious, and maliciously bend against the service and way of God, and therefore they cannot speak well of the ways of God. This way is every where spoken against, said they: so in that Numb. 16. Separate from them, and come out from among them. So the Apostle; Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness. So Solomon, Enter not into the way Prov. 4. 14. ch 9 v. 6. of the wicked, for sake the foolish, and live. They that walk with the most, shall p●rish with the most. They that do as the most, shall ere long suffer with the most; they that live as the most, must die with the most, and to hell with the most. The second Remedy against this device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that if you will sin with the multitude, all the Angels in heaven, and men on earth cannot keep you from suffering Sin and punishment are linked together with chains of adamant of sin; we may say as Isidore doth of the serpent (Tota dolores, quot colores,) so many colours, so many dolours. with the multitude; if you will be wicked with them, you must unavoidably be miserable with them; say to thy soul, oh my soul! if thou wilt sin with the multitude, thou must be shut out of heaven with the multitude, thou must be cast down to hell with the multitude, etc. And I heard another voice from Heaven, saying, come out of her my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues. Come out in affection, in action, and in habitation; for else the infection of sin will bring upon you the infliction of punishment. So saith the wise man; He that walketh with wise men shall be wise, but a companion of fools shall be destroyed, or as the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a jeroange, from ruange, to be naught. hath it, shall be broken in pieces. Multitudes may help thee into sin; yea, one may draw thee into sin, but 'tis not multitudes that can help thee to escape punishments: As you may see in Moses and Aaron, that were provoked to sin by the multitude; but were shut out of the pleasant Land, and fell by a hand of Justice as well as others. The third Remedy against this device 3. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider the worth and excellency of thy immortal soul. Thy soul is a jewel more worth What wise man would fetch gold out of a fie●y crucible, hazard his immortal soul (to gain the world) by following a multitude in those steps that lead to the chambers of death and darkness. than heaven and earth: The loss of thy soul is incomparable, irreparable, and irrecoverable; if that be lost, all is lost, and thou art undone for ever. Is it madness and folly in a man to kill himself for company? and is it not greater madness or folly to break the neck of thy soul, and to damn it for company? Suspect that way wherein thou seest multitudes to walk, the multitude being a stream that thou must row hard against, or thou wilt be carried into that gulf, out of which Angels cannot deliver thee. Is it not better to walk in a straight way alone, then to wander into crooked ways with company? sure 'tis better to go to Heaven alone, then to Hell with company. I might add other things, but these may suffice for the present; and I am afraid if these arguments do not stir you, other arguments will work but little upon you. The seventh Device that Satan 7 Device hath to keep souls from holy and heavenly services, is, BY casting in a multitude of vain thoughts, whilst the soul is in seeking of God, or in waiting on God, and by this device he hath cooled some men's spirits in heavenly services, and taken off (at least for a time) many precious Vellem servire Domine sed cogitationes non patiuntur, Lord now how fain would I serve thee, & vain thoughts will not suffer me. souls from religious performances. I have no heart to hear, nor no heart to pray, nor no delight in reading, nor in the society of the Saints, etc. Satan doth so dog, and follow my soul, and is still a casting in such a multitude of vain thoughts concerning God, the world, and my own soul, etc. that I even tremble to think of waiting upon God in any religious service; oh! the vain thoughts that Satan casts in, do so distaste my soul, and so grieve, vex, perplex, and distract my soul, that they even make me weary of holy duties, yea, of m● very life; oh! I cannot be so raised and ravished, so heated and melted, so quickened and enlarged, so comforted and refreshed as I should be, as I might be, and as I would be in religious services, by reason of that multitude of vain thoughts that Satan is injecting, or casting into my soul, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1 Remedy. When Pompey could not keep his soldiers in the camp by persuasion, he cast himself all along in the narrow passage that lead out of it, and then bid them go if you will, but you shall first trample upon your General, and the thoughts of this overcame them; you are wise, & know how to apply it to the point in hand. of Satan, is, to have your hearts strongly affected with the greatness, holiness, Majesty, and glory of that God, before whom you stand, and with whom your souls do converse in religious services; Oh! let your souls be greatly affected with the presence, purity, and majesty of that God before whom thou standest. A man would be afraid of playing with a feather, when he is speaking to a King; ah! when men have poor, low, light, slight, etc. thoughts of God, in their drawing near to God, they tempt the Devil to bestir himself, and to cast in a multitude of vain thoughts to disturb and distract the soul in its waiting on God. There is nothing that will contribute so much to the keeping out of vain thoughts, as to look upon God as an omniscient God, an omnipresent God, an omnipotent God, a God full of all glorious perfections; a God, whose Majesty, purity, and glory will not suffer him to behold the least iniquity. The reason why the blessed Saints, and glorious Angels in Heaven have not so much as one vain thought, is, because they are greatly affected with the greatness, holiness, majesty, purity, and glory of God. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, to be peremptory in religious services, notwithstanding all those wandering thoughts the soul It is a rule in the civil Law, (nec videtur actum, siquid supersit quod agatur) nothing seems to be done, if there remains aught to be done. is troubled with. This will be a sweet help against them for the soul to be resolute in waiting on God, whether it be troubled with vain thoughts, or not; to say, well, I will pray still, and hear still, and meditate still, and keep fellowship with the Saints still; many precious souls can say from experience, that when their souls have been peremptory in their waiting on God, that Satan hath left them, and hath not been so busy in vexing their souls with vain thoughts; when Satan perceives that all Si dixisti suffisit periisti, i● once thou sayest 'tis enough, thou art undone, saith Augustin. those trifling vain thoughts that he casts into the soul, do but vex the soul into greater diligence, carefulness, watchfulness, and peremptoriness in holy and heavenly services, and that the soul loses nothing of his zeal, piety, and devotion, but doubles his care, diligence, and earnestness; he often ceases to interpose his trifles, & vain thoughts as he ceased to tempt Christ, when Christ was peremptory in resisting his temptations. The third Remedy against this device 3. Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider this, that those vain and trifling thoughts that are cast 'Tis not Satan's casting in of vain thoughts that can keep mercy from the soul, or undo the soul, but the lodging, and cherishing of vain thoughts; oh jerusalem! how long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee (●er 4. 14.) Heb. in the midst of thee; they pass through the best hearts, they are lodged and cherished only in the worst hearts. into our souls, when we are waiting upon God in this or that religious service, if they are not cherished, and indulged, but abhorred, resisted, and disclaimed; they are not sins upon our souls, though they may be troubles to our minds, they shall not be put upon our accounts, nor keep mercies and blessings from being enjoyed by us; when a soul in uprightness can look God in the face, and say, Lord, when I approach near unto thee, there be a world of vain thoughts crowd in upon me, that do disturb my soul, and weaken my faith, and lessen my comfort, and spiritual strength; oh! these are my clog, my burden, my torment, my hell; oh! do justice upon these; free me from these that I may serve thee with more freeness, singleness, spiritualness, and sweetness of spirit. These thoughts may vex that soul, but they shall not harm that soul, nor keep a blessing from that soul; If vain thoughts resisted and lamented, could stop the current of mercy, and render a soul unhappy, there would be none on earth that should ever taste of mercy, or be everlastingly happy, etc. The fourth Remedy against this device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that watching against sinful thoughts, resisting of sinful thoughts, lamenting and weeping over sinful thoughts, carries Psal. 139. 23. Thoughts are the first born, the blossoms of the soul, the beginning of our strength, whether for good or evil, and they are the greatest evidence for, or against a man that can be. with it the sweetest, and strongest evidence of the truth, and power of grace, and of the sincerity of your hearts, and is the readiest and the surest way to be rid of them; many low and carnal considerations may work men to watch their words, their lives, their actions; As hope of gain, or to please friends, or to get a name in the world, and many other such like considerations; oh! but to watch our thoughts, to weep and lament over them, etc. this must needs be from some noble, spiritual, and internal principle, as love to God, a holy fear of God, a holy care and delight to please the Lord, etc. The Schools do well observe, that outward sins are of greater Majoris infamiae. Majoris reatus. infamy; but inward heart sins are of greater guilt, as we see in the Devils. There is nothing that speaks out a man to be throughly, and kindly wrought upon, as his having his thoughts to be 2 Cor. 10. 4, 5. brought into obedience, as the Apostle speaks, Grace is grown up to a very great height in that soul, where it prevails, to the subduing of those vain thoughts that walk up and down in the the soul; well, though you cannot be Psal. 139. 2. Isa. 59 7. ch. 66. 18. Mat. 9 4. ch. 12. 25. Zen● a wise heathen affirmed, that God even beheld the thoughts, Mat. 15. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 rid of them, yet make resistance and opposition against the first rise of them; when sinful thoughts arise, then think thus; the Lord takes notice of these thoughts, he knows them afar off, as the Psalmist speaks; he knew Herod's bloody thoughts, and Judas his betraying thoughts, and the Pharisees cruel and blasphemous thoughts afar off; oh! think thus, all these sinful thoughts, they defile and pollute the soul, they deface and spoil much of the inward beauty, and glory of the soul; if I commit this or that sin, to which my thoughts incline me, then either I must Tears in stead of Gems were the ornaments of David's bed, when he had sinned, & so they m●st be thine, or else thou must lie down in a bed of sorrow forever. repent, or not repent; if I repent, it will c●st me more grief, sorrow, shame, heart-breaking, and soul-bleeding, before my conscience will be quieted, divine Justice pacified, my comfort and joy restored, my evidences cleared, and my pardon in the Court of Conscience sealed, than the imagined profit, or seeming sensual pleasure can be worth; What fruit had you in those things whereof you are now ashamed? If I never repent, oh then my sinful Inward bleeding kills many a man; so will sinful thoughts, if not repent of. thoughts will be the Scorpions that will eternally vex me; the rods that will eternally lash me; the thorns that will everlastingly prick me; the dagger that will be eternally a stabbing me; the worm that will be for ever a gnawing me; oh! therefore watch against them, be constant in resisting them, an● in lamenting and weeping over them, and then they shall not hurt thee, though they may for a time trouble thee, and remember this; he that doth this, doth more than the most glistering and blustering Hypocrite in the world doth. The fifth Remedy against this device 5. Remedy. Ephes. 3. 19 The words are an hebraism; the Hebrews when they would set out many excellent things, they add the name of God to it, City of God, Cedars of God, wrestle of God, so here, that ye may be filled with the fullness of God. of Satan, is, to labour more and more to be filled with the fullness of God, and to be enriched with all spiritual and heavenly things; what's the reason that the Angels in heaven have not so much as an idle thought? 'tis because they are filled with the fullness of God; take it for an experienced truth, the more the soul is filled with the fullness of God, and enriched with spiritual and heavenly things, the less room there is in that soul for vain thoughts. The fuller the vessel is of wine, the less room there is for water; Oh! lay up much of God, of Christ, of precious promises, and choice experiences in your hearts, and then you will be less troubled with vain thoughts; A good man out of the good treasure Mat. 12. 3. of his heart bringeth forth good things. 6. Remedy. The sixth Remedy against this device of Satan, is, to keep up holy and spiritual affections; for such as your affections are, such will be your thoughts; Oh! Psal. 119. 97. Psal. 139. 8. how I love thy law, 'tis my meditation all the day; what we love most, we most muse upon; when I awake, I am still with thee. That which we much like, we shall much mind; them that are frequent in their love to God and his law, will be frequent in thinking of God, and his Simile. law; a child will not forget his mother. The seventh Remedy against this device 7. Remedy. 2 Tim. 2. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is entangled, it is a comparison which St Paul borroweth from the custom of the Roman Empire, wherein soldiers were forbidden to be proctor's of other men's causes, to undertake husbandry or Merchandise. of Satan, is, to avoid multiplicity of worldly business; oh! let not the world take up your hearts & thoughts at other times; souls that are torn In pieces with the cares of the world, will be always vexed and tormented with vain thoughts in all their approaches to God; vain thoughts will be still crowding in upon him that lives in a crowd of business. The stars which have least circuit, are nearest the Pole; and men that are least perplexed with business, are commonly nearest to God. The eighth Device that Satan 8 Device. hath to keep souls from religious services, from holy performances, is, BY working them to rest in their performances, to rest in prayer, and to rest in hearing, reading, and the communion Isa. 58. 1, 2, 3. Zech. 7. 4, 5, 6. Mat 6. 2. Rom. 17. of Saints, etc. and when Satan hath drawn the soul to rest upon the service done; then he will help the soul to reason thus; why, thou wert as good never pray, as to pray, and rest in prayer; as good never hear, as to hear, and rest in hearing; as good never be in the communion of Saints, as to rest in the communion of Saints; and by this device he stops many souls in their heavenly race, and takes off poor souls from those services that should be their joy and Crown. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell much upon the imperfections, and weaknesses that Pride and high confidence is most apt to creep in upon duties well done, saith one. do attend your choicest services; oh the spots! the blots! the blemishes, that are to be seen upon the face of our fairest duties! when thou hast done all thou canst, thou hast need to close up all with this; Oh! enter not into judgement with thy servant oh Lord; for the weaknesses that cleave to my best services, we may all Isa. 64. 6. say with the Church; All our righteousnesses are as a menstruous cloth. If God should be strict to mark what is done amiss in our best actions, we were undone. Oh! the water that is mingled with our wine, the dross that cleaves unto our Gold. The second Remedy against this device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider the impotency, and inability of any of your b●st services, divinely to comfort, refresh, and bear your souls up from fainting, and sinking in the days of troubles, when darkness is round about you; when God shall say to you, as he did 10. 14. once to the Israelites, Go, and cry unto the gods that you have chosen, let them save you in the time of your tribulation: So when God shall say in the day of your troubles, go to your prayers, to your hearing, and to your fasting, etc. and see, if they can help you, if they can support you, if they can deliver you; if God in that day doth but withhold the influence of his grace from thee, thy former services will be but poor cordially to comfort thee; and then thou must, and wilt cry out, oh! none but Christ, none Omne bonum in summo bono, all good is in the chiefest good. Nec Christus nec coelum patitur hyperbolen. but Christ; oh! my prayers are not Christ, my hearing is not Christ, my fasting is not Christ, etc. oh! one smile of Christ, one glimpse of Christ, one good word from Christ, on nod of love from Christ in the day of trouble and darkness, will more revive, and refresh the soul, than all your former services, in which your souls rested, as if they were the bosom of Christ, which should be the only centre of our souls. Christ is the Crown of Crowns, the glory of glories, and the heaven of heaven. The third Remedy against this device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that good things rested upon, will as certainly undo us, and everlastingly destroy us, as the greatest enormities that can be committed by us; those souls that after they have done all, do not look up so high as a Christ, and rest, and centre alone in Christ, laying down their services at the footstool of Christ, must lie down in sorrow, their bed is prepared for them in hell. Behold, all Isa. 50. ult. ye that kindle a fire, and compass yourselves with the sparks, and walk in the light of your fire, and in the sparks that ye have kindled, this ye shall have at mine hand, ye shall lie down in sorrow; Is it good dwelling with everlasting burn? with a devouring fire? if it be, why then rest in your duties still; if otherwise, then see that you centre only in the bosom of Christ. The fourth and last Remedy against 4 Remedy. this device of Satan, is, to dwell much upon the necessity and excellency of that resting place that God hath provided for you, above all other resting places; himself is your resting place, his free mercy and love is your resting place; the pure, glorious, matchless, and spotless righteousness of Christ is your resting place; ah! 'tis sad to think, that most men have forgotten their resting place, as the Lord complains; My people have been as lost sheep, their shepherds have caused them Jer. 50. 6. to go astray, and have turned them away to the mountains, they have gone from mountain to hill and forgotten their resting place. So poor souls that see not the excellency of that resting place that God hath appointed for their souls to lie down in; they wander ftom mountain to hill, from one duty to another, and here they will rest, and there they will rest; but souls that see the excellency of that resting place that God hath provided for them, they will say, farewel prayer, farewel hearing, farewel fasting, etc. I will rest no more in you, but now will rest only in the bosom of Christ, the love of Christ, the righteousness of Christ. The third thing to be showed, is the several Devices that Satan hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, questioning, and uncomfortable condition. Blessed Bradford in one of his Epistles saith thus; O Lord, sometimes me thinks I feel it so with me, as if there were no difference between my heart and the wicked, I have a blind mind, as they, a stout, stubborn, rebellious, hard heart as they, & so he goes on, etc. THough he can never rob a Believer of his Crown, yet such is his malice and envy, that he will leave no stone unturned, no means unattempted to rob them of their comfort, and peace, to make their life a burden, and a hell unto them, to cause them to spend their days in sorrow and mourning, in sighing and complaining, in doubting and questioning; surely we have no interest in Christ, our graces are not true, our hopes are the hopes of hypocrites; our confidence is but presumption; our enjoyments are but delusions, etc. I shall show you this in some particulars. The first Device that Satan 1 Device. hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, and so making their life a hell, is, BY causing them to be still poring, A Christian should wear Christ in his bosom as a flower of the light, for he is a whole paradise of delight; he that minds not Christ more than his sin, can never be thankful and fruitful as he should. and musing upon sin, to mind their sins more than their Saviour, yea, so to mind their sins, as to forget, yea, to neglect their Saviour, that as the Psalmist speaks; The Lord is not in all their thoughts; their eyes are so fixed upon their disease, that they cannot see the Remedy, though it be near; and they do so muse upon their debts, that they have neither mind nor heart to think of their surety, etc. Now the first Remedy against 1 Remedy. this device of Satan, is, FOr weak believers to consider, that though Jesus Christ hath not freed them from the presence of sin, yet he Peccata enim non nocent, si non placent, my sins hurt me not, if they like me not. Sinn is like that wild figtree, or Ivy in the wall, cu● off stump, body, bough, and branches; yet some strings or other will sprout out again till the wall be plucked down. Rom. 8. 1. hath freed them from the damnatory power of sin. It's most true, that sin and grace were never borne together, neither shall sin and grace die together; yet while a believer breathes in this world, they must live together, they must keep house together. Christ in this life will not free any believer from the presence of any one sin, though he doth free every believer from the damning power of every sin; There's no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the spirit. The Law cannot condemn a believer, for Christ hath fulfilled it for him; divine Justice cannot condemn him, for that Christ hath satisfied; his sins cannot condemn him, for they in the blood of Christ are pardoned; and his own conscience (upon righteous grounds) cannot condemn him, because Christ, that is greater than his conscience, hath acquitted him, etc. The second Remedy against this device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that though Jesus Christ hath not freed you from the molesting, and vexing power of sin, yet he hath freed you from the reign and The primitive Christians chose rather to be thrown to lions without, then left to lusts within Ad leonem magis quam leonem, saith Tertullian. Rom. 6. 14. dominion of sin. Thou sayest that sin doth so molest and vex thee, that thou canst not think of God, nor go to God, nor speak with God; oh! but remember, 'tis one thing for sin to molest and vex thee, and another thing for sin to reign, and have dominion over thee. For sin shall not have dominion over you; for ye are not under the law, but under grace. Sin may rebel, but it shall never reign in any Saint; it fareth with sin in the regenerate, as with those Beasts that Daniel speaks of, That had their dominion taken Dan. 7. 12. away, yet their lives were prolonged for a season, and a time. Now sin reigns in the soul, when the soul willingly and readily obeys it, and subjects to its commands, as Subjects do actively obey, and embrace the commands of their Prince. The commands 'Tis a sign that sin hath not gained your consent, but committed a rape upon your souls, when you cry out ●o God; if the ravished Virgin under the Law cried out, she was guiltless▪ Deut. 22. 27. So when sin plays the Tyrant over the soul, and the soul cries out 'tis guiltless, those sins shall not be charged upon the soul. of a K. are readily embraced and obeyed by his Subjects; but the commands of a Tyrant are embraced & obeyed unwillingly. All the service that is done to a Tyrant, is out of violence, and not out of obedience; A free and willing subjection to the commands of sin, speaks out the soul to be under the reign and dominion of sin; but from this plague, this hell, Christ frees all Believers: Sin cannot say of a believer, as the Centurion said of his servant; I bid one go, and be goeth, and to another come, and he cometh, and to another do this, and he doth it. No, the heart of a St. rises against the commands of sin; and when sin would carry his soul to the Devil, he hales his sin before the Lord, and cries out for Justice, Lord, saith the believing soul, sin plays the Tyrant, the Devil in me, it would have me to do that which makes against thy holiness, as well as against my happiness; against thy honour and glory, as my comfort & peace; therefore do me justice, thou righteous Judge of Heaven and Earth, and let this tyrant sin die for it, etc. The third Remedy against this device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, constantly to keep one eye upon the promises of remission of sin, Isa. 44, 22. Mica 7. 18, 19 Coloss. 2. 13, 14. The promises of God are a precious book, every leaf drops mirth and mercy. as well as the other eye upon the inward operations of sin. This is most certain truth, that God will graciously pardon those sins to his people, that he will not in this life fully subdue in his people. Paul prays thrice, i. e. often to be delivered from the thorn in the flesh, all he can get is, my grace is sufficient for thee; I will graciously pardon that to thee, that I will not conquer in thee, Though the weak Christian cannot open, read, and apply them, Christ can, & will apply them to their souls. jer. 33. 8. Isa. 43. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An Hebrew participle, & notes a constant, a continued act of God; I, I am he, blotting out thy transgressions, to day, and to morrow, etc. 4 Remedy. saith God. And I will cleanse them from all their iniquity, whereby they have sinned against me, and I will pardon all their iniquities whereby they have sinned against me, and whereby they have transgressed against me. I, even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake, and will not remember thy sins. Ah! you lamenting souls, that spend your days in sighing and groaning under the sense and burden of your sins; why do you deal so unkindly with God, and so injuriously with your own souls, as not to cast an eye upon those precious promises of remission of sin, which may bear up, and refresh your spirits in the darkest night, and under the heaviest burden of sin. The fourth Remedy against this device of Satan, is, to look upon all your sins, as charged upon the account of Christ, as debts which the Lord Jesus hath fully satisfied; and indeed were there but one farthing of that debt unpaid, that Christ was engaged to satisfy, it would not have stood with the unspotted justice of God, to have let him come into Heaven, and sit down at his own right hand; but all our debts by his death being discharged, we are freed, and he is exalted to sit down at the right hand of his Father, which is the top of his glory, and the greatest pledge of our felicity; For he hath made him to be sin for 2 Cor. 5. 21. Christ was (peccatorum maximus) the greatest of sinners by imputation, and reputation. Isa. 53. 5, 6. us that knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him, saith the Apostle: All our sins were made to meet upon Christ, as that Evangelicall Prophet hath it. He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities, the chastisement of our peace was upon him, and with his stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray, we have turned every one to his own way, and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all; or as the Hebrew hath it, he hath made the iniquity of us all to meet in him. In Law we know, that all the debts of the Wife are charged upon the Husband; saith the Wife to one, and to another, if Christ hath the greatest worth and wealth in him, as the worth and value of many pieces of silver is in one piece of gold, so all the excellencies scattered abroad in the creatures, are united to Christ. I own you any thing, go to my husband; so may a believer say to the Law, and to the justice of God; if I own you any thing, go to my Christ, who hath undertaken for me; I must not sit down discouraged under the apprehensions of those debts, that Christ to the utmost farthing hath fully satisfied; would it not argue much weakness, I had almost said much madness, for a debtor to sit down discouraged, upon his looking over those debts, that his surety hath readily, freely, and fully satisfied; the sense of his great love should engage a man for All the whole volume of perfections, which is spread through Heaven & earth, is epitomised in him. ever to love, and honour his surety, and to bless that hand that hath paid the debt, and crossed the books, etc. but to sit down discouraged when the debt is satisfied, is a sin that bespeaks Repentance, etc. Christ hath cleared all reckon betwixt God and us; you remember the Scape-goate, upon his head all the iniquities Levit. 16. 21. of the children of Israel, and all their transgressions in all their sins were confessed Christ is (Canalis gratiae) the channel of grace from God. and put, and the Goat did bear upon him all their iniquities, etc. Why, the Lord Jesus is that blessed Scape-Goate, upon whom all our sins were laid, and who alone hath carried our sins away into the Land of forget fullness, where they shall never, never be remembered more; a believer under the guilt of his sin may look the Lord in the face, and sweetly plead thus with him; 'Tis true Lord, I owed thee The bloods of Abel, for so the Hebrew hath it (as if the blood of one Abel had so many tongues as drops) cried for vengeance against sin; b●t the blood of Christ cries louder for the p●rdon of sin. much, but thy Son was my Ransom, my Redemption; his blood was the price, he was my surety, and undertook to answer for my sins; I know thou must be satisfied, and Christ hath satisfied thee to the utmost farthing, not for himself, for what sins had he of his own? but for me, they were my debts that he satisfied for; be pleased to look over the book, and thou shalt find that 'tis crossed by thy own hand, upon this very account that Christ hath suffered, and satisfied for them. The fifth Remedy against this device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider of the reasons, why the Lord is pleased to have his people exercised, troubled, and vexed with the operations of sinful corruptions, Augustin saith, that the first, second, and third virtue of a Christian is humility. and they are these; partly to keep them humble, and low in their own eyes; and partly to put them upon the use of all divine helps, whereby sin may be subdued and mortified; And partly, that they may live upon Christ for the perfecting the work of Sanctification; Lilmod lelammed, we therefore learn, that we may teach, is a proverb among the Rabbins. After the Trojans had been wandering, & tossing up and down the Mediterranean Sea; as soon as they espied Italy, they cried out with exulting joy, Italy, Italy: so will Saints when they come to Heaven. and partly, to wean them from things below, and to make them heartsick of their absence from Christ, and to maintain in them bowels of compassion towards others, that are subject to the same infirmities with them; and that they may distinguish between a state of grace, and a state of glory, and that Heaven may be more sweet to them in the close. Now doth the Lord upon these weighty reasons suffer his people to be exercised, and molested with the operations of sinful corruptions; oh! then let no believer speak, writ, or conclude bitter things against his own soul, and comforts; because that sin troubles and vexes his righteous soul, etc. but lay his hand upon his mouth, and be silent, because the Lord will have it so, upon such weighty grounds, as the soul is not able to withstand. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that Believers must repent for their being God never g●ve a Believer a new heart, that it should always li● a bleeding, and that it should always be rend and torn in pieces with discouragements. discouraged by their sins. Their being discouraged by their sins will cost them many a prayer, many a tear, and many a groan: And that, because their discouragements under sin flows from ignorance and unbelief; it springs from their ignorance of the riches, freeness, fullness, and everlastingness of God's love; and from their ignorance of the power, glory, sufficiency, and efficacy of the death and sufferings of the Lord Jesus Christ: And from their ignorance of the worth, glory, fullness, largeness, and completeness of the righteousness of Jesus Christ: And from their ignorance of that real, close, spiritual, glorious, and inseparable union that is betwixt Christ, and their precious soul: Ah! did precious souls know, and believe the truth of these things, as they should, they would not sit down dejected, and overwhelmed under the sense and operations of sin, etc. The second Device that Satan 2 Device. hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, BY working them to make false definitions of their graces: Satan knows, that as false definitions of sin wrong the soul one way, so false definitions of grace wrong the soul another way. I will instance only in faith; oh! how doth Satan labour might and main to work men to make false definitions of faith; Some he works to define faith too high, as that it is a full assurance of the love of God to a man's soul in particular, or a full persuasion of the pardon, and remission of a man's own sins in particular; saith Satan, what dost thou talk of faith? faith is an assurance of the love of God, and of the pardon of sin, and this thou hast not; thou knowest thou art far off from this, therefore thou hast no faith; and by drawing men to make such a false definition of faith, he keeps them in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, and makes them spend their days in sorrow and sighing, so that tears are their drink, and sorrow is their meat, and sighing is their work all the day long, etc. The Philosophers say there are eight degrees of heat; we discern three; now i● a m●n should define heat only by the highest degree, than all other degrees will be cast out from being heat: so if men shall define faith only by the highest degrees, by assurance of the love of God, and of the pardon of his sins in particular, what will become of lesser degrees of faith? If a man should define a man to be a living man, only by the highest and strongest demonstrations of life, as laughing, leaping, running, working, walking, etc. would not many thousands that groan under internal, and external weaknesses, and that cannot laugh, nor leap, nor run, nor work, nor walk, be found dead men by such a definition, that yet we know to be alive; 'tis so here, and you know how to apply it, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly ●o consider, that there may be true faith, yea, great measures of faith, where there is no assurance. The Canaanite woman in the Gospel had strong faith, yet no assurance that we read of. These things have I written unto you (saith John) that believe on the name of the Son of God, that ye may know, that ye have eternal life,, and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of God; In these words you see that they did believe, and had eternal life, in respect of the purpose and promise of God, and in respect of the seeds, and beginnings of it in their souls; and in respect of Christ their head, who sits in Heaven as a public person, representing all his chosen one's; Who hath raised us up together, Ephes. 2. 6. and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus; and yet they did not know that they had eternal life. 'Tis one thing to have a right to heaven, and another thing to know it; 'Tis one thing to be beloved, and another thing for a man to know that he is beloved. 'Tis one thing for God to write a man's name in the book of life, and another thing for God to tell a man, that his name is written in the book of life, and to say to him, rejoice, because thy name is written in heaven. So Paul: In whom ye also trusted after Ephes 1. 13. So those in ●ha● Isa. 50. 10 had faith, though they had no assurance. Mica 7. 8, 9 ye heard the word of truth, the Gospel of your salvation, in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise. So Micha, Rejoice not against me oh my enemy, when I shall fall, I shall rise; when I shall sit in darkness, the Lord shall be a light unto me. I will bear the indignation of the Lord, because I have sinned, etc. or the sad countenance of God, as the Hebrew hath it. This soul had no assurance, for he sits in darkness, and was under the sad countenance of God, and yet had strong faith: As appears in those words, when I fall, I shall arise: when I sit in darkness, the Lord shall be a light unto me. He will bring me forth to the light, and I shall behold his righteousness, and let this suffice for the first answer. The second Remedy against this Device 2. Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that God in the Scriptures doth define John 1. 12. faith otherwise; God defines faith to be a ●●ceiving of Christ; As many as received him, to them he gave this privilege to be Act. 11. 23. the sons of God, to as many as believed on his name; to be a cleaving of the soul unto God, though no joy but afflictions attend the soul. Yea, the Lord defines faith to be a coming to God in Christ, Mat. 11. 28. John 6. 37. Heb. 7. 25. 26. Isa. 3. 4, etc. and often to a resting, and staying, or rolling of the soul upon Christ. 'Tis safest, and sweetest to define as God defines, both vices and graces; this is the only way to settle the soul, and to secure it against all the wiles of men and devils, who labour by false definitions of grace to keep precious souls in a doubting, staggering, and languishing condition, and so make their lives a burden, a hell unto them. The third Remedy against this device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider this, that there may be true faith, where there Mat. 6. 30. chap. 14. 31. & chap. 16. 8. is much doubtings; witness those frequent say of Christ to his Disciples, Why are ye afraid oh ye of little faith? Luke 12. 28. Persons may be truly believing, who nevertheless are sometimes doubting; in the same persons (that the Scriptures speak of) you may see their faith commended, and their doubts condemned, which doth necessarily suppose a presence of both. The fourth Remedy against this device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that assurance is an effect of faith; therefore it cannot be faith. The cause cannot be the effect, nor the root the fruit; as the effect slowes from the cause, the fruit from the root, the stream from the fountain, so doth the assurance flow from faith; this truth I shall make good thus. The assurance of our salvation, and pardon of sin doth primarily arise from the witness of the spirit of God, that Ephes. 1. 13. Gal. 5. 6. we are the children of God: And the spirit never witnesseth this, till we are believers; for we are sons by faith in Gal. 4 6. Christ Jesus: therefore assurance is not faith, but follows it, as the effect follows the cause. Again, no man can be assured, and persuaded of his salvation, till he be united to Christ, till he be engrafted into Christ; and a man cannot be engrafted into Christ, till he hath faith; he must first be engrafted into Christ by faith, before he can have assurance of his salvation, which doth clearly evidence, that assurance is not faith, but an effect and fruit of faith, etc. Again, faith cannot be lost, but assurance may; therefore assurance is not faith. Though assurance be a precious Psal. 51. 12. Psal. 30. 6, 7. flower in the garden of a Saint, and is more infinitely sweet, and delightful to the soul, than all outward comforts, Cant. 5. 6. Isa. 8. 17. and contents; yet 'tis but a flower that is subject to fade, and to lose its freshness, There is many thousand precious souls, of whom this world is not worthy, that have the ●aith of reliance, & yet want assurance, and the effects of it; as high joy, glorious peace, and vehement long after the coming of Christ. and beauty, as Saints by sad experience find, etc. Again, a man must first have faith, before he can have assurance, therefore assurance is not faith; and that a man must first have faith, before he can have assurance, is clear; by this a man must first be saved, before he can be assured of his salvation, for he cannot be assured of that which is not; and a man must first have a saving faith, before he can be saved by faith; for he cannot be saved by that which he hath not; therefore a man must first have faith, before he can have assurance, and so it roundly follows, that assurance is not faith, etc. The third Device that Satan 3 Device. hath to keep the soul in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, BY working the soul to make false Psal. 77. 7. 11. Psal. 88 1. ult. Psal. 73. 2. 23. inferences from the cross actings of providence; saith Satan, dost thou not see how Providence crosses thy prayers, and crosses thy desires, thy tears, thy hopes, thy endeavours; surely, if his love were toward thee, if his soul did delight and take pleasure in thee, he would not deal thus with thee, etc. Now the remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider that many things may be cross to our desires, that are not cross to our good; Abraham, Jacob, David, Job, Moses, Jeremiah, The Circumcellians being not able to withstand the preaching, & writing of Augustine, sought his destruction, having beset the way he was to go his visitation, but by God's providence, he missing his way, escaped the danger. Jonah, Paul, etc. met with many things that were contrary to their the fires, and endeavours, that were not contrary to their good, as all know, that have wisely compared their desires and endeavours, and Gods actings together. Physic often works contrary to the Patient's desires, when it doth not work contrary to their good. I remember a story of a godly man, who had a great desire to go to France, and as he was going to take shipping, he broke his leg, and it pleased providence so to order it, that the ship that he should have gone in, at that very same time was cast away, and not a man saved, and so by breaking a bone, his life was saved. Though Providence did work cross to his desires, yet it did not work cross to his good, etc. The second Remedy against this device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that the hand of God may be against a man, when the love and heart of God is much set upon a man; No man can conclude how the heart of God stands by his hand. The hand of God was against Ephraim, and yet his love, his heart was jer. 31. 18, 19, 20. God's providential hand may be with persons, when his heart is set against them; Gods providential hand was for a time with Saul, Haman, Ashur, & jehu, and yet his heart was set against them. No man knoweth love or hatred by all that is before them. Eccles. 9 1, 2. dearly set upon Ephraim. I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself thus; thou hast chastised me, and I was chastised as a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke: turn thou me, and I shall be turned, for thou art the Lord my God. Surely after that I was turned, I repent; and after that I was instructed, I smote upon my thigh; I was ashamed, yea, even confounded, because I did bear the reproach of my youth. Ephraim is my dear son, he is a pleasant child; for since I spoke against him, I do earnestly remember him still: therefore my bowels are troubled for him, I will surely have mercy upon him, saith the Lord. God can look sowrly, and chide bitterly, and strike heavily, even where, and when he loves dearly. The hand of God was very much against Job, and yet his love, his heart was very much set upon Job, as you may see by comparing the 2. first chap. of job with the two last. The hand of God was sore against David, and Jonah, when his heart was much set upon them. He that shall conclude, that the heart of God is against those that his hand is against, will condemn the generation of the just, whom God unjustly would not have condemned. The third Remedy against this device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that all the cross providences that befall the Saints, are but in order to some noble good, that God doth intent to confer upon them. Providence wrote cross to David's desire, in taking away the child sinfully begotten, but yet not cross to a more noble good; for was it not fare better for David to have such a legitimate Heir as Solomon was, then that a Bastard should wear the Crown, and sway the Sceptre? Joseph you know, was sold into a far Country by the envy and malice of his brethren, and afterwards imprisoned, because he would not be a prisoner to his Mistress' lusts; yet all these cross providences did wonderfully conduce to his advancement, and the preservation of his Father's family, which was then the visible Church of Christ. It was so ordered by a noble hand of providence, that what they sought to decline, they did promote; Joseph was therefore sold by his brethren, that he might not be worshipped, and yet he was therefore worshipped, because he was sold. David was designed to a Kingdom; but oh the straits, troubles, and deaths, that he run through, before he feels the weight of the Crown; and all this was but in order to the sweetening of his Crown, and to the settling of it more firmly and gloriously upon his head; God did so contrive it, that Jonah's offence, and those cross actings of his that did attend it, should advantage that end which they seemed most directly The motions of divine providence are so dark, so deep, so changeable, that the wisest and noblest souls cannot tell what conclusions to make. to oppose; Jonah he flies to Tanshish, then cast into the Sea, then saved by a miracle: Then the Mariners, as is very probable, who cast Jonah into the Sea, declared to the Ninivites what had happened; therefore he must be a man sent of God, and that his threaten must be believed, and harkened to, and therefore they must repent, and humble themselves, that the wrath threatened might not be executed, etc. The fourth Remedy against this device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that all the strange, dark, deep, and changeable providences that Believers meet with, shall further them in their way to heaven, in their journey to happiness; divine wisdom and love will so order all things here below, that they shall work for the real, internal, and eternal good of them that love him. All the rugged providences that David met with, did contribute to the Orosius speaking of Valentinian, saith, he that for Christ's name sake had lost a Tribune ship, within a while after succeeded his persecutor in the Empire. bringing of him to the Throne; and all the rugged promises that Daniel, and the three children met with, did contribute to their great advancement; So all the rugged providences that Believers meet with, they shall all contribute to the lifting up of their souls, above all things below God. As the waters lifted up Noah's Ark nearer Heaven: and as all the stones that were about Stevens ears, did but knock him the closer to Christ, the cornerstone, so all the strange rugged providences that we meet with, they shall raise us nearer Heaven, and knock us nearer to Christ, that precious cornerstone, etc. The fourth Device that Satan 4 Device. hath to keep the soul in a sad, doubting, & questioning condition, is, BY suggesting to them, that their graces are not true, but counterfeit; saith Satan, all is not gold that glisters, all is not grace that you count grace, that you call grace; that which Yet it must be granted, that many a fair flower may grow out of a stinking root, and many sweet dispositions, and fair actions may be where there is only the corrupt root of nature. you call faith is but a fancy, and that which you call zeal, is but unnatural heat and passion; and that light you have, 'tis but common, 'tis short to what many have attained to, that are now in hell, etc. Satan doth not labour more mightily to persuade hypocrites that their graces are true, when they are counterfeit, than he doth to persuade precious souls that their graces are counterfeit, when indeed they are true, and such as will abide the touchstone of Christ, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that grace is taken two ways. First, 'tis taken for the gracious good will and favour of God, whereby he is pleased of his own free love, to accept of some in Christ for his own. This some call the first grace, because 'tis the fountain of all other graces, and the Spring from whence they flow; and it's therefore called grace, because it makes a man gracious with God, but this is only in God. Secondly, grace is taken for the gifts of grace, and they are of two sorts, common, or special. Some are common to Believers, and hypocrites, as a gift of knowledge, a gift of prayer, etc. Gal. 5. 22, 23. Some are special graces, and they are proper, and peculiar to the Saints, as faith, humility, meekness, love, patience, etc. The second Remedy against this device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, wisely to consider the differences betwixt renewing grace, and God brings not a pair of scales to weigh our graces, but a touchstone to try our graces. Purity, preciousness, & holiness is stamped upon all saving graces. Acts 15. 9 2 Pet. 1. 1. jude 20. restraining grace; betwixt sanctifing grace, and temporary grace, and this I shall show you in these following particulars 1. True grace makes all glorious within and without. The King's daughter is all glorious within, her raiment is of wrought gold. True grace makes the underastanding glorious, the will glorious, the affections glorious, it casts a general glory upon all the noble parts of the soul; The King's daughter is all glorious within: And as it makes the inside glorious, so it makes the outside glorious; Her clothing is of wrought gold; it makes men look gloriously, and speak gloriously, and walk, and act gloriously: so that vain souls shall be Acts 4. vers. 8. to vers. 15. forced to say, that these are they that have seen Jesus; as grace is a fire to burn up, and consume the dross, and filth of the soul, so it is an ornament to 2 Cor. 5. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a new creation, new Adam, new Covenant, new Paradise, new Creation, new Lord, new Law, new hearts, & new natures go together▪ beautify and adorn the soul. True grace makes all new, the inside new, and the outside new; If any man be in Christ he is a new creature; but temporary grace doth not this. True grace changes the very nature of a man, moral virtue doth only restrain, or chain up the outward man; it doth not change the whole man; a Lion in a grate is a Lion still, he is restrained, but not changed; for he retains his Lion-like nature still: so temporary graces restrain many men from this and that wickedness, but it doth not change and turn their hearts from wickedness; but now true grace, that turns a Lion into a Lamb, as you may see in Paul, Acts 9 and a notorious strumpet, into a blessed and glorious Penitent, as you may see in Mary Magdalen, etc. Luke 7. 2. The objects of true grace are supernatural; true grace is conversant about the choicest, and the highest objects, 2 Cor. 4. 18. chap. 11. Hebr. 15. Prov. 14. A Saint hath his feet where other men's heads are. Matth. 6. about the most soul-enobling, and soul-greatning objects, as God, Christ, precious promises, that are more worth than a world; and a Kingdom that shakes not, a Crown of glory that withers not, and Heavenly treasures that rust not. The objects of temporary grace are low, and poor, and always within the compass of reasons reach. 3. True grace inables a Christian (when he is himself) to do spiritual actions with real pleasure and delight. To souls truly gracious, Christ's yoke is Mat. 11. 30. 1 John 5. 3. Rom. 7. 22. easy, and his burden is light, his commandments are not grievous, but joyous; I delight in the law of God after the inward man, saith Paul; the blessed man is described by this, that he delights in the law Psal. 1. 2. of the Lord; 'Tis joy to the just to do judgement, Prov. 21. 15. saith Solomon; To a gracious soul all the ways of the Lord are pleasantness, and his paths are peace. But to souls that have but temporary grace, but moral virtues, religious services, are a toil, not a pleasure; a burden, and not a delight: Wherefore have we fasted say they, Isa. 58. 3. and thou seest not? wherefore have we afflicted Mal. 3. 14. our souls, and thou takest no knowledge, etc. Ye have said (say those in Malachi) it is vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have kept his Ordinances, and that we have walked mournfully before the Lord of Hosts? When will the new Moon be gone (say those in Amos) that Amos 8. 5. we may sell corn? and the Sabbath, that we may set forth wheat, making the Epha small, and the shekel great, and falsifying the balances by deceit. Fourthly, True grace makes a man most careful, and most fearful of his own heart; it makes him most studious about his own heart, informing that, examining that, and P 〈…〉. 51. 10. Psal. 119. 36. 80. Psal. 139. 23. Psal. 86. 11. Matth. 23. watching over that; but temporary grace, moral virtues, make men more mindful, and careful of others to instruct them, and counsel them, and stir up them, and watch over them, etc. which doth with open mouth demonstrate, that their graces are not saving, and peculiar to Saints; but that they are temporary, and no more than what Judus, Demas, and the Pharisees had, etc. 5. Grace will work a man's heart to love, and cleave to the strictest, and holiest ways and things of God, for their purity and sanctity, in the face of all dangers and hardships; Thy word is very Psal. 119. 140. pure, therefore thy servant loveth it; others love it, and like it, and follow it, for the credit, the honour, the advantage that they get by it; but I love it for the spiritual beauty and purity of it. So the Psalmist, All this is come upon us, Psal. 44. 17, 18, 19 Grace is a panoply against all troubles, & a paradise of all pleasures. yet have we not forgotten thee, neither have we dealt falsely in thy Covenant. Our heart is not turned bacl, neither have our steps declined from thy way. Though thou hast sore broken us in the place of Dragons, and covered us with the shadows of death. But temporary grace that will not bear up the soul against all oppositions and discouragements in the ways of God, as is clear by their apostasy in that sixth Mat. 13. 20, 21. of John, and by the stony grounds falling away, etc. 6. True grace will enable a man to step over the world's Crown, to take up Christ's Cross, to prefer the cross of Christ above the glory and bravery of this world. It enabled Abraham, and Moses, and Daniel, with those other Heb. 11. Worthies in the 11. of the Hebrews to do so. Godfrey of Bullen, first King of Jerusalem, refused to be crowned with a Crown of Gold, saying, that it became Few are of Hieroms mind, that had rather have St. Paul's coat with his heavenly graces, than the purple of Kings with their Kingdoms. 2 Tim. 4. 10. Mat. 19 20, 21, 22. The King of Navarr told Beza, that in the cause of Religion he would launch no further into the Sea, than he might be sure to return safe to the Haven. not a Christian to wear a Crown of Gold, where Christ had wore a Crown of thorns; oh! but temporary grace cannot work the soul, to prefer Christ's cross above the world's Crown; but when these two meet, a temporary Christian steps over Christ's cross, to take up, and keep up the world's crown. Demas hath forsaken us to embrace this present world. So the young man in the Gospel had many good things in him, he bid fair for Heaven, and came near to Heaven; but when Christ set his Cross before him, he steps over that to enjoy the world's Crown. When Christ bid him go, and sell all that he had and give to the poor, etc. He went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions. If Heaven be to be had upon no other terms, Christ may keep his Heaven to himself, he'll have none, etc. Then in the seventh place, consider this, that sanctifying grace, renewing grace puts the soul upon spiritual duties, from spiritual and intrinsical motives, as from the sense of divine love, that doth constrain the soul to wait on As what I have, if offered to thee, pleaseth not thee, oh Lord without myself, so the good things we have from thee, though they may refresh us, yet they satisfy us not without thyself. Ber. It is an excellent speech of Bernard (bonus es domine, animae quaerenti; quid invenienti?) Good art thou oh Lord to the soul that seeks thee, what art thou then to the soul that finds thee. God, and to act for God, and the sense of the excellency and sweetness of communion with God, and the choice and precious discoveries that the soul hath formerly had of the beauty and glory of God, whilst it hath been in the service of God. The good looks, the good words, the blessed love-letters, the glorious kisses, and the sweet embraces that gracious souls have had from Christ in his service, do provoke and move them to wait upon him in holy duties; ah but restraining grace, temporal grace that puts men upon religious duties, only from external motives, as the ear of the creature, the eye of the creature, the rewards of the creature, & the keeping up of a name amongst the creatures, and a thousand such like considerations, as you may see in Saul, Jehu, Judas, Demas, and the Scribes and Pharisees, etc. The Abbot in Melancton lived strictly, and walked demurely, and looked humbly, so long as he was but a Monk; but when by his seeming extraordinary sanctity, he got to be Abbot, he grew intolerable proud and insolent; and being asked the reason of it, confessed, that his former lowly look was, but to see, if he could find the keys of the Abbey. Such poor, low, vain motives work temporary souls to all the service they do perform, etc. 8. Saving grace, renewing grace will cause a man to follow the Lord fully in the desertion of all ●in, and in the observation of all God's precepts. Joshua and Numb. 14. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath fulfilled after me; a metaphor taken from a ship under sail, that is strongly carried with the wind, as fearing neither rocks, nor sands. Luke 1. 5, 6. Rev. 14. 4. Mat. 23. 23. Caleb followed the Lord fully; Zacharias and Elizabeth were righteous before God, and walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless. The Saints in the Revelation are described by this, that they follow the Lamb wheresoever he goes; but restraining grace, temporary grace cannot enable a man to follow the Lord fully; all that temporary grace can enable a man to do, is to follow the Lord partially, unevenly, and haltingly, as you may see in Jehu, Herod, judas, and the Scribes and Pharisees, who paid tithe of Mint, and Anise, and Cumming, but omittted the weighty matters of the Law, Judgement, Mercy, and faith, etc. True grace works the heart to the Psal. 119. 104. 128. I had rather go to hell pure from sin, then to Heaven polluted with that filth, saith Anselm. hatred of all sin, and to the love of all truth; it works a man to the hatred of those sins, that for his blood he cannot conquer, and to loathe those sins, that he would give all the world to overcome: So that a soul truly gracious can say, though there be no one sin mortified, and subdued in me, as it should, and as I would, yet every sin is hated, and loathed by me. So a soul truly gracious can say, though I do not obey any one command as I should, and as I would, yet every word is sweet, every command of God is precious; dearly prize, and greatly love those Da quod jubes & jube qu●d vis, give what thou commandest, and command what thou wil●. Psal. 119. 119. 127. 167. verses. commands that I cannot obey, though there be many commands that I cannot in a strict sense fulfil, yet there is no command I would not fulfil, that I do not exceedingly love. I love thy commandments above gold, above fine gold. My soul hath kept thy testimonies, and I love them exceedingly. 9 True grace leads the soul to rest in Christ, as in his (summum bonum) chiefest good; it works the soul to centre in Christ, as in his highest and ultimate end; Whether should we go, thou hast 〈◊〉 6. 68 Cant. 5. 10. Cant. 3. 4. Grace is that star that leads to Christ, 'tis that cloud & pillar● of fire that leads the soul to that heavenly Canaan, where Christ si●s chief. the worlds of eternal life. My beloved is white and ruddy, the chiefest of ten thousand. I found him whom my soul loved, I held him and would not let him go. That wisdom a Believer hath from Christ, it leads him to centre in the wisdom of Christ; and that love the soul hath from Christ, it leads the soul to centre in the love of Christ; and that Righteousness the soul hath from Christ, it leads the soul to rest, and centre in the Righteousness of Christ; 1 Cor. 1. 30. Phil. 3. 9 True grace is a beam of Christ, and where it is, it will naturally lead the soul to rest in Christ: The stream doth not more naturally lead to the fountain, nor the effect to the cause, then true grace leads the soul to Christ. But restraining grace, temporary grace works the soul to centre, and rest in things below Christ; Sometimes it works the soul to centre in the praises of the creature, sometimes to rest in Mat. 6. 1, 2. Zach. 7. 5, 6. the rewards of the creature; verily they have their reward saith Christ, and so in a hundred other things, etc. 10. True grace will enable a soul to sit down satisfied, and contented with the naked enjoyments of Christ. The Cui cum paupertate bene convenit, pauper non est, saith Seneca. A contented man cannot be a poor man. enjoyment of Christ without honour will satisfy the soul; the enjoyment of Christ without riches, the enjoyments of Christ without pleasures, and without the smiles of creatures, will content and satisfy the soul. 'Tis enough, Joseph is alive. So saith a gracious soul, though honour is not, and riches are not, and health is not, and Charles the great his Motto was, Christus regnat, vincit, triumphant. And so 'tis the Saints. friends are not, etc. It is enough that Christ is, that he reigns, conquers, and triumphs; Christ is the pot of Mannah, the cruice of oil, a bottomless ocean of all comfort, content, and satisfaction; he that hath him wants nothing; he that wants him enjoys nothing, having nothing (saith Paul) and yet possessing 2 Cor. 6. 10. Saint Austin upon Psal. 12. brings in God rebuking a discontented Christian thus; what is thy faith? have I promised thee these things? what, wert thou made a Christian that thou shouldst flourish here in this world? all things. Oh! but a man that hath but temporary grace, that hath but restraining grace, cannot sit down satisfied and contented under the wan● of outward comforts; Christ is good with honours, saith such a soul; and Christ is good with riches, and Christ is good with pleasures, and he is good with such and such outward contents. I must have Christ, and the world, or else with the young man in the Gospel (in soight of my soul) I shall forsake Christ to follow the world. Ah! how many shining Professors be there in the world, that cannot sit down satisfied, and contented under the want of this, or that outward comfort and content, but are like Bedlams, fretting and vexing, raging, and madding, as if there were no God, no Heaven, no Hell, nor no Christ to make up all such outward wants to souls. I but a soul truly gracious can Content is the deputy of outward felicity, & supplies the place where its absent. As the Jews throw the book of Hester to the ground before they read it, because the name of God is not in it, as the Rabbins have observed: So do Saints in some sense, those mercies wherein they do not read Christ's name, & see Christ's heart. Luther said, he had rather be in hell with Christ, then in heaven without him. say, In having nothing, I have all things, because I have Christ; having therefore all things in him, I seek no other reward, for he is the universal reward; such a soul can say, nothing is sweet to me without the enjoyment of Christ in it; honours, nor riches, nor the smiles of creatures are not sweet to me, no further than I see Christ, and taste Christ in them; the confluence of all outward good cannot make a Heaven of glory in my soul, if Christ who is the top of my glory be absent. As Absolom said, What is all this to me, so long as I cannot see the King's face? so saith the soul, what do you tell me of this, and that outward comfort, when I cannot see his face whom my soul loves? why, my honour is not my Christ, nor riches is not Christ, nor the favour of the creature is not Christ; let me have him, and let the men of this world take the world & divide it amongst themselves, I prise my Christ above all; I would enjoy my Christ before all other things in the world; his presence will make up the absence of all other comforts, and his absence will darken, and embitter all my comforts; so that my comforts will neither taste like comforts, nor look like comforts, nor warm like comforts, etc. when he that should Lam. 1. 16. comfort my soul stands a far off, etc. Christ is all, and in all to souls truly gracious; we have all things in Christ, and Christ is all things to a Christian; Coloss. 3. 11. None but Christ, none but Christ, said Lambers, listing up his hands, and his singer's ends flaming. if we be sick, he is a Physician; if we thirst, he is a fountain; if our sins trouble us, he is righteousness; if we stand in need of help, he is mighty to save; if we fear death, he is life; if we be in darkness, he is light; if we be weak, he is strength; if we be in poverty, he is plenty; if we desire Heaven, he is the way. The soul cannot say, this I would have, and that I would have; but saith Christ, 'tis in me, 'tis in me, eminently, perfectly, eternally. The fifth Device that Satan 5 Device. hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, BY suggesting to them, that that condict john 8. 44. The Devil is a liar, and ●he Father of it. The Devils breasts saith Luther, ●re very fruitful with lies. that is in them, is not a conflict that is only in Saints; but such a conflict that is to be found in hypocrites, and profane souls; when the truth is, there is as much difference betwixt the conflict that is in them, and that which is in wicked men, as there is betwixt light and darkness, betwixt Heaven and H●ll. And the truth of this I shall evidence to you in the following particulars. 1. The whole frame of a Believers soul is against sin; understanding, will, and affections, all the powers and faculties 'Twas a good prayer of him that said (Domine libera me a malo homine meipso.) Lord deliver me from an ill man myself. Austin complains, that men do not tame the beasts in their own bosoms. Rom. 2. 21, 22, 23. of the soul are in arms against sin. A covetous man may condemn covetousness, and yet the frame and bent of his heart may be to it; a proud person may condemn pride, and yet the frame of his spirit may be to it; & the drunkard may condemn drunkenness, and yet the frame of his spirit may be to it; a man may condemn stealing and lying, and yet the frame of his heart may be to it. Thou that preachest a man should not steal, dost thou steal? Thou that sayest a man should not commit Adultery, dost thou commit Adultery? Thou that ab●orrest idols, dost thou commit sacrilege? Thou that makest thy boast of the Law, through breaking the law, dishonourest thou God? But a Saints will is against it. The evil that I would not do, I do; and his affections are against Rom. 7. 19 17. it, what I hate, I do. 2. A Saint conflicts against sin universally, Psal. 119. 104. I hate every false way, Sanethi from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to hate with a deadlyly and irreconciliable hatred. the least as well as the greatest, the most profitable, and the most pleasing sin, as well as against ●hose that are less pleasing and profitable; he will combat with all, though he cannot conquer one as he should, and as he would; he knows that all sin strikes at God's holiness, as well as his own happiness; at God's glory, as well as at his soul's comfort and peace. He knows that all sin is hateful to God, and that all sins are Traitors to the Crown and dignity of the Lord Jesus. He looks upon one sin, and sees He knows that all the parts of the old man hath, and doth play the part of a treacherous friend, and a friendly traitor; therefore his heart strikes at all. The greater the combat is, the greater shall be the following rewards, saith Tertullian. that that threw down Noah, the most righteous man in the world; and he looks upon another sin, and sees that that cast down Abraham, the greatest believer in the world; and he looks upon another sin, and sees that that threw down David, the best King in the world; and he looks upon another sin, and sees that that cast down Paul, the greatest Apostle in the world. He sees that one sin threw down Samson, the strongest man in the world; another cast down Solomon, the wisest man in the world; and another Moses, the meekest man in the world; and another sin cast down Job, the patientest man in the world, and this raises a holy indignation in his soul against all: so that nothing can satisfy, and content True hatred is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against the whole kind. Plutarch reports of one who would not be resolved of his doubts, because he would not lose the pleasure in seeking for resolution. So wicked men will not be rid of some sins, because they would not lose the seeming pleasure of sinning. his soul, but a destruction of all those lusts and vermin, that vex and rack his righteous heart; it will not satisfy a gracious soul to see Justice done upon one sin, but he cries out for Justice upon all; he would not have some crucified, and others spared, but cries out, Lord, crucify them all, crucify them all. Oh! but now the conflict that is in wicked men is partial; they frown upon one fin, and smile upon another; they strike at some sins, but stroke others; they thrust some out of doors, but keep others close in their bosoms, as you may see in jehu, Herod, judas, Simon Magus, and Demas. Wicked men strike at gtosse sins, such as are not only against the law of God, but against the Laws of nature and Nations; but make nothing of less sins, as vain thoughts, idle words, sinful motions, John 3. 20. petty oaths, etc. They fight against those sins that fight against their honour, profits, pleasures, etc. but make truce with those that are as right hands, and as right eyes to them, etc. 3. The conflict that is in a Saint against sin, is maintained by spiritual Arguments, by arguments drawn from Though to be kept from sin brings comfort to us, yet for us to oppose sin from spiritual, and heavenly arguments, and God to pardon sin, that brings most glory to God. 2. Cor. 12. 7, 8, 9 the love of God, the honour of God, the sweetness of communion with God, and from the spiritual and heavenly blessings, and privileges that are conferred upon them by God, and from Arguments drawn from the blood of Christ, the glory of Christ, the eye of Christ, the kisses of Christ, and the intercession of Christ: And from Arguments drawn from the earnest of the Spirit, the seal of the Spirit, the witness of the Spirit, the comforts of the Spirit. Oh! but the conflict that is in wicked men, is from low, earnall, and legal Arguments drawn from the eye, ear, or hand of the creature, or drawn from shame, hell, curses of the Law, &c 4. The conflict that is in Saints is a 'Twas an excellent saying of Eusebius Emesenus; Our fathers overcome the torments of the flames, let us overcome the fiery darts of vices. Consider that the pleasure and sweetness that follows victory over sin, is a thousand times beyond that seeming sweetness that is in sin. constant conflict; though sin and grace were not born in the heart of a St. together, and though they shall not die together, yet whilst a Beeleever lives they must conflict together; Paul had been about fourteen years converted, when he cried out, I have a law in my members rebelling against the law of my mind, and leading me captive to the law of sin. Pietro Candiano, one of the Dukes of Venice, died fight against the Nauratines', with the weapons in his hands: so a Saint lives fight, and dies fight, he stands fight, and falls fight, with his spiritual weapons in his hands. But the conflict that is in wicked men is inconstant; now they fall out with sin, and anon they fall in with sin; now 'tis bitter, anon 'tis sweet; now the sinner turns from his sin, and anon he turns to the wallowing in sin, as the swine doth to the wallowing in the mire; one hour you shall have him 2 Pet. 2. 19, 20. praying against sin, as if he feared it more than hell, and the next hour you shall have him pursuing after sin, as if there were no God to punish him, no justice to damn him, no hell to torment him. The conflict that is in the Saints, is in the same faculties; there is the judgement against the judgement, the mind against the mind, the will against the will, the affections against the affections; A Heathen could say, their soul is in a mutiny; a wicked man is not friends with himself, he and his conscience are at difference. Arist. that is, the regenerate part against the unregenerate part, in all the parts of the soul; but now in wicked men, the conflict is not in the same faculties, but between the conscience and the will; the will of a sinner is bend strongly to such and such sins; but conscience puts in, and tells the sinner God hath made me his Deputy, he hath given me a power to hang and draw, to examine, scourge, judge, and condemn, and if thou dost such and such wickedness, I shall be thy Jailor, and thy tormentor; I do not bear the rod, nor the sword in vain, saith Conscience; if thou sinnest I shall do my office, and then thy life will be a hell, and this raises a tumult in the soul. 6. The conflict that is in the Saints, is a more blessed successful, and prevailing conflict; a Saint by his conflict with sin, gains ground upon his sin. They that are Christ's (saith the Apostle) have These two, Grace and Sin, are like two Buckets at a well, when one is up, the other is down, they are like the two Laurels at Rome, when one flourishes, the other withers. The more grace thrives in the soul, the more fin dies in the soul. 2 Tim. 3. 13. From naught they gro● to be very naught, and from very naught, to be stark naught. Lactantius saith of Lucian, Nec diis nec hominibus pepercit, hespared neither God nor man. Mortification is a continued act, 'tis a daily dying to sin. I die daily. A crucified man will strive and struggle, yet in the eyes of the Law, and in the account of all that see him, he is dead; 'tis just so with sin. Psal. 58. 11. There is no such pleasure (saith Cyprian) as to have overcome an offered pleasure, neither is there any greater conquest, then that that is gotten over a man's corruptions. crucified the world with the affections, and lusts. Christ puts to his hand, and helps them to lead captivity captive, and to set their feet upon the necks of those lusts that have formerly trampled upon their souls and their comforts. As the house of Saul grew weaker and weaker, and the house of David grew stronger and stronger, so the Lord by the discoveries of his love, and by the influences of his spirit, he causes grace, the noble part of a Saint, to grow stronger and stronger, and corruption like the house of Saul, to grow weaker and weaker. But sin in a wicked heart gets ground, and grows stronger and stronger; notwithstanding all his conflicts, his heart is more encouraged, emboldened, and hardened in a way of sin, as you may see in the Israelites, Pharaoh, Jehu, and Judas; who doubtless found many strange conflicts, tumults, and mutinies in their souls, when God spoke such bitter things against them, and did such justice upon them. But remember this by way of Caution, though Christ hath given sin its death's wound (by his power, spirit, death, and resurrection) yet it will die but a lingering death: As a man that is mortally wounded, dies by little and little, so doth sin in the heart of a Saint. The death of Christ on the Cross was a lingering death, so the death of sin in the soul, is a linger death, now it dies a little, and anon it dies a little, etc. as the Psalmist speaks, Slay them not lest my people forget, scatter them by thy power, and bring them down oh Lord our shield. He would not have them utterly destroyed, but some relics preserved as a memorial: so God dealeth in respect of sin, 'tis wounded and brought down, but not wholly slain, something is still left as a monument of the Divine grace, and to keep us humble, wakeful, and watchful, and that our armour may be still kept on, and our weapons always in our hands. The best men's souls in this life hangs between the flesh and the spirit, as it were like Mahomet's Tomb at Aleppo, between two loadstones; like Erasmus, as the Papists paint him, betwixt The Romans lost many a battle, ●nd yet in the issue were Conquerors in all their wars; 'tis just so with the Saints. Heaven and Hell; like the Tribe of Manasseh, half on this side Jordan, in the Land of the Amorites, and half on that side in the Holy Land; yet in the issue they shall overcome the flesh, and trample upon the necks of their spiritual enemies. The Sixth Device that Satan hath to keep a poor soul in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, BY suggesting to the soul, that surely 6 Device. his estate is not good, because he cannot joy and rejoice in Christ, as once he could, because he hath lost that comfort and joy that once was in his spirit. Saith Satan, thou knowest the time was, when thy heart was much carried out to joying and rejoicing in Christ; thou dost not forget the time when thy heart used to be full of joy and comfort; but now, how art thou fallen in thy joys and comforts? Therefore thy estate is not good, thou dost but deceive thyself, to think that ever it was good, for surely if it had, thy joy and comfort would have continued. And hereupon the soul is apt to take part with Satan, and say, 'tis even so, I see all is naught, and I have but deceived my own soul, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is to consider, that the loss of comfort is a separable adjunct from grace; the soul may be f●ll of holy affections, when 'tis empty of Divine consolations. There may be, and often Ps. 63. 1, 2, 8. Isa. 50. 10. 7. Mic. 7. 8, 9 Psal. 42. 5, is true grace, yea, much grace, where there is not a drop of comfort, nor a dram of joy. Comfort is not of the being, but of the well-being of a Christian. God hath not so linked these 2 choice lovers together, but that they may be Spiritual joy is a Sun that is often clouded▪ though it be as precious a flower as most Paradise affords, ye● 'tis subject to side and w●●ther. put asunder. That wisdom that is from above, will never work a man to reason thus, I have no comfort, therefore I have no grace, I have lost that joy that once I had, therefore my condition is not good, was never good, etc. but 'twill enable a man to reason thus, though my comfort is gone, yet the God of my comfort abides; though my joy is lost, yet the seeds of grace remain. The best men's joys are as glass, bright and brittle, and evermore in danger of breaking. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that the precious things that thou still injoyest, are far better than the joys and comforts that thou hast lost. Thy union with Christ, thy communion with Christ, thy sonship, thy saint-ship, thy heir-ship, thou still injoyest by Christ, is far better than the comforts thou hast lost by sin; what though thy comforts be gone, yet thy union and communion with Christ remains, though thy comforts be gone; yet thou art a Son, though Jer. 31. 18, 19, 20. a comfortless Son; an heir, though a comfortless heir; a Saint, though a comfortless Saint. Though the bag of silver (thy comforts) be lost, yet the When one objected to Faninus, his cheerfulness to Christ's Agony and sadness, he answered, Christ was sad, that I might bemerry, he had my sins, and I have his righteousness. box of Jewels (thy union with Christ, thy communion with Christ, thy Sonship, thy Saint-ship, thy Heir-ship) which thou still injoyest, is far better than the bag of silver thou hast lost; yea, the least of those precious Jewels is more worth, than all the comforts in the world; well, let this be a cordial to comfort thee, a star to lead thee, and a staff to support thee, that thy box of Jewels are safe, though thy bag of silver be lost. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is to consider, that thy condition is no other than what hath been the condition of those precious Psal. 51. 12. Psal. 30. 6, 7. Job 23. 6 8 9 30. 31. Lam. 1. 16. Mat. 27. 46. souls whose names were written upon the heart of Christ, and who are now at rest in the bosom of Christ. One day you shall have them praising and rejoicing, the next day a mourning & weeping: one day you shall have them a singing, Psal. 42. 5. The Lord is our portion, the next day a sighing and expostulating with themselves, Lam. 5. 15. Why are ye cast down oh our souls? Why is our Harp turned to mourning? And our Organ into the voice of them that weep? etc. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is solemnly to consider, that the causes of joy and comfort are not always the same. Happily thy former joy and comfort did spring from The spirit doth not every day make a feast in the soul, he doth not make every day to be a day of wearing the wedding robes. the witness of the spirit, he bearing witness to thy soul that thy nature was changed, thy sins pardoned, thy soul reconciled, etc. Now the Spirit may upon some special occasion, bear witness to the soul, that the heart of God is dearly set upon him, that he loves him with an everlasting love, etc. and yet the soul may never enjoy such a testimony all the days of his life again: Though the spirit be a witnessing spirit, it's not his office every day to witness to believers their interest in God, Christ, Heaven, etc. Or happily thy former joy and comfort, did spring from the newness and suddenness of the change of thy condition; for a man in one hour to have A pardon given unexpectedly into the hand of a malefactor, when he is on the last st●p of the ladder, ready to be turned off, will cause mu●h joy & rejoicing; the newness and suddenness of the change of his condition, will cause his heart to leap and rejoice; yet in process of time much of his joy will ●e aba●ed, though his li●e be as d●a● to him still, as ever it was. his night turned into day, his darkness turned into light, his bitter into sweet, God's frowns into smiles, his hatred into love, his hell into a Heaven, must greatly joy and comfort him. It cannot but make his heart to leap, and dance in him, who in one hour shall see Satan accusing him, his own heart condemning him, the eternal God frowning upon him, the gates of Heaven barred against him, all the creation standing armed at the least beck of God, to execute vengeance on him, and the mouth of the infernal pit open to receive him. Now in this hour, for Christ to come to the amazed soul, and say to it, I have trod the Winepress of my Father's wrath for thee, I have laid down my life a ransom for thee, by my blood I have satisfied my Father's Justice, and pacified his anger, and procured his love for thee; by my blood I have purchased the pardon of thy sins, thy freedom from hell, and thy right to Heaven, etc. Oh! how wonderfully will this cause the soul to leap for joy? The fifth Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that God will restore and make up the comforts of his people; though thy candle be put out, Hudson the Martyr deserted at the stake, went from under his chain, and having prayed earnestly, was comforted immediately, and suffered valiantly. So Mr. Glover, when he was within sight of the stake, cried out to his friend, he is come, he is come, meaning the comforter that Christ promised to send. yet God will light it again, and make it burn more light than ever; though thy sun for the present be clouded, yet he that rides upon the clouds, shall scatter those clouds, and cause the sun to shine, and warm thy heart, as in former days, as the Psalmist speaks, a Ps. 71. 20, 21. Thou which hast showed me great and s●re troubles, shalt quicken me again, and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth. Thou shalt increase my greatness, and comfort me on every side. God takes away a little comfort, that he may make room in the soul for a greater degree of comfort. This the Prophet Isaiah sweetly shows, b Isa. 57 18. I have seen his ways, and will heal him, I will lead him also, and rest●re comforts unto him, and to his mourners. Bear up sweetly oh precious soul! thy storm shall end in a calm; and thy dark night in a sunshine day; thy mourning shall be turned into rejoicing, and the waters of consolation shall be sweeter and higher in thy soul, then See also the 126 Psal. 6. v. and the 42 Psal. 7, 8. ever; the m●rcy is surely thine, but the time of giving it is the Lords: wait but a little, and thou shalt find the Lord comforting thee on every side. The seventh Device that Satan hath to keep souls in a doubting and questioning condition, is, BY suggesting to the soul his often 7 Device. relapses into the same sin which formerly he hath pursued with particular sorrow, grief, shame and tears, and prayed, complained, and resolved against. Saith Satan, thy heart is not right with God, surely thy estate is not good, thou dost but flatter thyself, to think that ever God will eternally own, and embrace such a one as thou art, who complainest against sin, and yet relapsest into the same sin, who with tears and groans confessest thy sin, and yet ever and anon art fallen into the same sin, etc. I confess this is a very sad condition for a soul, after he hath obtained mercy and pity from the Lord, after God hath spoken peace and pardon to him, and wiped the tears from his eyes, and set him upon his legs, to return to folly; ah! how do relapses lay men open to the greatest afflictions, and worst A backslider may say (opera & impensa periit) all my pains and charge is lost. temptations? How do they make the wound to bleed afresh? How do they darken and cloud former assurances and evidence● for Heaven? How do they put a sword into the hand of conscience to cut and slash the soul? They raise such fears, terrors, horrors, and doubts in the soul, that the soul cannot be so frequent in duty, as formerly, nor so fervent in duty as formerly, nor so confident in duty as formerly, nor so bold, familiar, and delightful with God in duty as formerly; nor so constant in duty as formerly: they give Satan an advantage to triumph over Christ; they make the work of repentance mo●e difficult; they make a man's life a burden, and they render death to be very terrible unto the soul, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that there are many Scriptures that do clearly evidence a possibility of the St. falling into the same sins, whereof they have formerly repent. c Hos. 14. 4. I will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely, for mine anger is turned away from them, saith the Lord by the Prophet Hosea, so the Prophet Jeremiah speaks, d jer. 3. 12. 14. Go and proclaim these words towards the North▪ and say, return thou back-sliding Israel▪ saith the Lord, and I will not cause mine anger to fall upon you: for I am merciful▪ saith the The sin of backsliding is a soul-wounding sin. I will heal their backsliding: you read of no arms for the back, though you do for the breast. Lord, and I will not keep anger for ever. Turn, oh backsliding Israel, saith the Lord, for I am married unto you: And I will take you one of a City, and two of a family, and I will bring you to Zion: So the Psalmist, They turned back and dealt unfaithfully like their Fathers, they were turned aside like a deceitful bow. And no wonder, for though their repentance be never so sincere and sound, yet their graces are but weak, and their mortification imperfect in When a soldier bragged too much of a great scar in his forehead, Augustus Caesar (in whose time Christ was borne) asked him if he did not get it when he looked back as he fled. this life; though by grace they are freed from the dominion of sin, and from the damnatory power of every sin, and from the love of all sin, yet grace doth not free them from the seed of any one sin; and therefore 'tis possible for a soul to fall again and again into the same sin; if the fire be not wholly put out, who would think it impossible that it should catch and burn again and again? The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is seriously to consider, that God hath no where engaged himself by any particular promise, that souls converted and united to Christ, shall not fall again and again into the same sins after conversion. I cannot find in the whole Book of God, where he In some cases the Saints have found God better than his word; he promised the Children of Israel only the Land of Canaan, but besides that he gave them two other Kingdoms, which he never promised. And to Zachary he promised to give him his speech at the birth of the child, but besides that, he gave him the gift of Prophecy. hath promised any such strength or power against this or that particular sin, as that the soul shall be for ever (in this life) put out of a possibility of falling again and again into the same sins; and where God hath not a mouth to s●eak, I must not have a heart to believe. God will graciously pardon those sins to his people, that he will not in this life effectually subdue in his people. I would go far to speak with that soul that can show a promise, that when our sorrow and grief hath been so great, or so much, for this or that sin, that then God will preserve us from ever falling into the same sin; the sight of such a promise would be as life from the dead, to many a precious soul, who desires nothing more than to keep close to Christ, and fears nothing more than backsliding from Christ. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is seriously to consider, that the most renowned, and now crowned Saints, have in the days of their being on earth, relapsed into one and the A sheep may often slip into a slough, as well as a swine. same sin. Lot was twice overcome with wine; John twice worshipped the Angel; Abraham did often dissemble, and jay his wife open to adultery, to save his own life, which some Heathens would not have done. And it came to Gen. 20. 13. ●h. 12. pass, when God caused me to wander from my Father's house, that I said unto her, this is thy kindness which thou shalt show unto me, at every place whether we shall come, say of me, he is my brother. David in his Perhaps the Prodigal sets out unto us, a Christian relapsed; for he was a son before, and with his Father, & then went away from him and spent all, and yet he was not quite undone, but returned again. wrath was resolved, if ever man was, that he would be the death of Nabal, and all his innocent Family, and after this he fell into the foul murder of Vriah. Though Christ told his Disciples that his Kingdom was not of this world, yet again, and again, and again, three several times, they would needs be on horseback, they would feign be high, great, and glorious in this world; their pride and ambitious humour put them (that were but as so many baggars) upon striving for pre-eminence, and greatness in the world, when their Lord and Master told them 3 several times of his sufferings in the world, and of his going out of the world. Jehoshaphat, 2 Chron. 18. ch. 1. 2. 3. 30, 31. though a godly man, yet joins affinity with wicked Ahab, and though he was saved by a miracle, yet soon after he falls into the same sin, and joins himself with ch. 20. 35. 36, 37. Ahaziah, King of Israel, who did very wickedly. Samson i● by the Spirit of the Lord numbered among the faithful worthies, Heb. 11. 32. and yet he fell often into one gross sin, as is evident in the book of Judges; Jud. 14. 15. 16. ch. Peter you know relapsed often, and so did Jonah; and this comes to pass, that they may see their own inability to stand, to resist, or overcome any temptation, or corruption. And that they may be taken off from all false confidences, and rest wholly upon God, and only upon God, and always upon God; and for the praise and honour of the power, wisdom, skill, mercy, and The Prodigal saw the compassion of his Father, the greater in receiving him, after he had run away from him. goodness of the Physician of our souls, that can heal, help, and cure, when the disease is most dangerous, when the soul is relapsed, and grows worse and worse, and when others say there is no help for him in his God, and when his own heart and hopes are dying. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that ther● are relapses into enormities, and there are relapses into infirmities; now 'tis not usual with God to leave his people Relapses into enormities are (peccata vulnerantia & divistantia) wounding & wasting sins. Therefore the Lord is graciously pleased to put under his everlasting arms, and stay his chosen one's from frequent falling into them. frequently to relapse into enormities, for by his spirit and grace, by his smiles and frowns, by his word and rod, he doth usually preserve his people from a frequent relapsing into enormities; yet he doth leave his choicest ones frequently to relapse into infirmities (and of his grace he pardons them in course) as idle words, passion, vain thoughts, etc. Though gracious souls strive against these, and complain of these, and weep over these, yet the Lord to keep them humble, leaves them frequently to relapse into these; and these frequent relapses into infirmities shall never be their bane, because they be their burden The fift Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is to consider, that there are There is a great difference between a sheep that by weakness falls into the mire, & a swine, that delights to wallow in the mire; between a woman that is forced, though she strives, and cries out, and and an alluring adulteress. involuntary relapses, and there are voluntary relapses; involuntary relapses are, when the resolution and full bend of the heart is against sin, when the soul strives with all its might against sin, by sighs and groans, by prayers and tears, and yet out of weakness, is forced to fall back into sin, because there is not spiritual strength enough to overcome; Now though involuntary relapses must humble us, yet they must never discourage, nor deject us, for God will freely and readily pardon those in course. Voluntary relapses are, when the soul longs, and loves to return to the fleshpots of Egypt; when 'tis a pleasure, and a pastime to a man to return to his old courses; such voluntary relapses speak out the man blinded, hardened, and ripened for rulne, etc. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that there is no such power, or infinite virtue in the Christ upbraded his Disciples for their unbelief, and hardness of heart, who had seen his glory, as the glory of the only begotten son of God, full of grace and truth. 1 John 14. greatest horror, or sorrow the soul can be under for sin, nor in the sweetest, or chosest discoveries of God's grace, and love to the soul; as for ever to fence, and secure the soul from relapsing into the same sin; Grace is but a created habit, that may be prevailed against by the secret, subtle, and strong workings of sin in our hearts: And those discoveries that God makes of his love, beauty, and glory to the soul, do not always abide in their freshness, and power upon the heart; but by degrees they fade, and wear off, and then the soul may return again to folly; As we see in Peter, who after he had a glorious testimony Mat. 16. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 22, 23, 24. from Christ his own mouth, of his blessedness and happiness, labours to prevent Christ from going up to Jerusalem to suffer out of base slavish fears, that he and his fellows could not be secure, if his Master should be brought to suffer. And again, after this, Christ had him up into the Mount, and there Mat. 7. 1, 2, 3. shown him his beauty, and glory, to strengthen him against the hour of tentation that was a coming upon him; and yet soon after he had the honour, and happiness of seeing the glory of the Lord (which most of the Disciples had not) he basely, and most shamefully denies the Lord of glory, thinking Mat. 26. 69. ult. by that means to provide for his own safety: And yet again, after Christ had broke his heart with a look of love, for his most unlovely deal, and bade them that were first acquainted with his resurrection, to go and tell Peter that he was risen; I say, after all this, slavish fears prevail upon him, and he basely dissembles, and plays ehe jew with the jews, and the Gentile with the Gentiles, to the seducing of Barnabas, Gal 2. 11, 12, 13. etc. Yet by way of caution, know it's very rare, that God doth leave his beloved ones frequently, to relapse into one and the same gross sin; for the law of nature is in arms against gross sins, aswell as the law of grace; so that a gracious soul cannot, dares not, will not frequently return to gross folly. And God hath made even his dearest ones dearly smart for their relapses, as may be seen by his deal with Samson, jehosaphat, and Peter; Ah Lord! what a hard heart hath that man, that can see thee stripping and whipping thy dearest ones for their relapses, and yet make nothing of returning to folly, etc. The eighth Device that Satan 8 Device. hath to keep souls in a doubting, and questioning condition, is, BY persuading them that these estate is not good, their hearts are not upright, their graces are not sound, b●cause they are so followed, vexed, and tormented with ' temptations; 'tis his method, first to vex, and weary the soul with temptations, and then to tempt the soul, that surely 'tis not beloved, He may so tempt, as to make a Saint weary of his life. Job 10. 1. My soul is weary of my life. because 'tis so much tempted; and by this stratagem he keeps many precious souls in a sad, doubting, and mourning temper many years, as many of the precious sons of Zion have found by woeful experience, etc. Now the remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that those that have been best, and most beloved, have been most tempted by Satan. Though Satan can never rob a Christian of his Crown, yet such is his malice, that he will therefore tempt, that he may spoil them of their comforts; such is his enmity to the Father, that the nearer and dearer any child is to him, the more will Satan trouble him, and vex him with temptations; Pirates do not use to set upon poor, empty vessels; and beggars need not fear the thief; those that have most of God, and most rich in grace, shall be most set upon by Satan, who is the greatest and wisest Pirate in the world. Christ himself was most near, and most dear, most innocent, and most excellent, and yet none so much tempted as Christ; David was dearly beloved, and yet by Satan tempted to number the people; job was highly praised by God himself, and yet much tempted, witness those sad things that fell from his mouth, when he was wet to the skin; Peter was much prized by Christ, witness that choice testimony that Christ gave of his faith and happiness, and his showing him his glory in the Mount, and that eye of pity that he cast upon him after his fearful fall, etc. and yet tempted by Satan. And the Lord said, Luke 22. 31, 32. Simon, Simon, behold Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat: But I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail thee not, etc. Paul had the honour of being exalted as high as high as heaven, and of seeing that glory that could not be expressed; and yet he was no sooner stepped out of Heaven, but he is buffeted by Satan, lest he should be exalted above measure. If 2 Cor. 12. 2. 7. these that were so really, so gloriously, so eminently beloved of God; if these that have lived in Heaven, and set their feet upon the stars, have been tempted, let no Saints judge themselves not to be beloved, because they are tempted. It is as natural for Saints to be tempted that are dearly beloved, as 'tis for the Sun to shine, or a bird to sing; the E●gle complains not of her wings, nor the Peacock of his train, nor the Nightingale of her voice, because these are natural to them; no more should S 'tis. of their temptations, because they are natural to them; For we wrestle not against Ephes. 6. 12. flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the Rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that all the temptations that befall the Saints, shall be sanctified to them by a hand of love; ah! the choice experiences that the Saints get of the power of God, supporting them, of the wisdom of God directing them (so to handle their spiritual weapons, their graces, as not only to resist, but to overcome) of the mercy and goodness of the Lord, pardoning and succouring of them. And therefore saith Paul, I received the messenger 2 Cor. 12. 7. Vi●e B●zam, 〈◊〉, & 〈◊〉 Lather said there were three things this made a Preacher; M●●itation, prayer, and temptation. Satan for to buffet me, lest I should be exalted, lest I should be exalted above measure, 'tis twice in that verse he gins with it, and ends with it; if he had not been buffeted, who knows how his heart would have swelled; he might have been carried higher in conceit, then before he was in his ecstasy. The school of temptation is a choice school, a school wherein God gives his people the clearest, and the sweetest discoveries of his love; a school wherein God teaches his people to be more frequent, and fervent in duty; when Paul was buffeted, than he prayed thrice, that is, frequently, and fervently; A school wherein God teaches his people to be more tender, meek, and compassionate to other poor tempted souls then ever; A school wherein God teaches his people to see a greater evil in sin then ever, and a greater emptiness in the creature then ever, and a greater need of Christ, and freegrace then ever; A school wherein God will teach his people, that all temptations are but his Goldsmiths, by which he will try, and refine, and make his people more bright and glorious. The issue of all temptations shall be the good of the Saints; as you may see by the temptations that Adam, and Eve, and Christ, and David, and Job, and Peter, and Paul met with. Those hands of power, and love that bring light out of darkness, good out of evil, sweet out of bitter, life out of death, Heaven out of Hell, will bring much sweet and good to his people, out of all the temptations that come upon them. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan is, wisely to consider, that no temptations don't hurt nor harm the Saints, so long as they are not resisted by them, and prove the greatest affliction that can befall them; 'tis not Satan's tempting, but your assenting; not his enticing, but your yielding, that makes temptations hurtful to your souls; if the soul when 'tis tempted, resists the temptation, and saith with Christ, get thee behind me Satan; and with that young Convert, I am not the man that I Ego non sum ego. was; or as Luther counsels all men, to answer all temptations with these words (Christianus sum) I am a Christian; if a man's temptations be his greatest affliction, then is the temptation no sin upon his soul, though it be a trouble upon his mind: when a soul can look the Lord in the face, and say, ah Lord! I have many outward troubles now upon me, I have lost such and such a near mercy, and such and such dear desirable mercies, and yet thou that knowest the heart, thou knowest that all my crosses and losses do not make so many wounds in my soul, nor fetch so many sighs from my heart, nor tears from my eyes, as those temptations do, that Satan follows my soul with: when 'tis thus with the soul, than temptations are only the souls trouble, they are not the souls sin. Satan is a malious and envious enemy; sometimes he ●hewes his malice, by letting those things abide by the soul, as may most vex, and plague the soul, as Gregory observes in his leaving of Jobs wife, which was not out of his forgetfulness, carelessness, or any love, or pity to job, but to vex, and torment him, etc. and to work him to blaspheme God, despair, and die, etc. as his names are, so is he; his names are all names of enmity; the Accuser, the Tempter, the Destroyer, the Devourer, the envious Man; and this malice, and envy of his, he shows sometimes by tempting men to such sins as are quite contrary to the temperature of their bodies, as he did Vespasian and Julian, men of sweet and excellent natures to be most bloody murderers; and sometimes he shows his malice, by tempting men to such things as shall bring hi● no honour, nor profit, etc. fall down and worship me, to blasphemy, and Atheism, etc. the thoughts and first motions whereof cause the bear't and the flesh to tremble; And sometimes he shows his malice, by tempting them to those sins, which they have not found their nature's prone to, and which they abhor in others, etc. Now if the soul resists these, and complains of these, and groans and mourns under these, and looks up to the Lord Jesus to be delivered from these, then shall they not be put down to the soul's account, but to Satan's, who shall be so much the more tormented, by how much the more the Saints have been by him maliciously tempted, etc. Make present and peremptory resistance against Satan's temptations, bid defiance to the temptation at first sight; When Constantine the Emperor was told that there was no means to cure his leprosy, but by bathing his body in the blood of Infants, he presently answered (malo jemper aegrotare quam tali remedio convalescere) I had rather not be cured, then use such a remedy. 'tis safe to resist, 'tis dangerous to dispute; Eve lost herself, and her posterity, by falling into the lists of dispute, when she should have resisted, and stood upon terms of defiance with Satan; he that would stand in the hour of temptation, must plead with Christ, 'tis written; he that would triumph over temptations, must plead still, 'tis written. Satan is bold and impudent, and if you are not peremptory in your resistance, he will give you fresh onsets. 'Tis your greatest honour, and your highest wisdom, peremptorily to withstand the beginnings of a temptation, for an after remedy comes often too late. Mistress Katherine Bretterge, once, after a great conflict with Satan, said, Reason not with me, I am but a weak woman; if thou hast any thing to say, say it to my Christ, he is my Advocate, my strength, and my redeemer, and he shall plead for me. Men must not seek to resist Satan's craft with craft (sed per apertum martem) but by open defiance; he shoots with Satan in his own bow; who thinks by disputing and reasoning to put him off. As soon as a temptation shows its face, say to the temptation, as Ephraim to his idols; get you hence, what have I any Hosea 14. more to do with you? oh! say to the temptation, as David said to the sons of Zerviah; What have I to do with you? 2 Sam. 16. 10. you will be too hard for me. He that doth thus resist temptations, shall never be undone by temptation, etc. Make strong and constant resistance I have read of one who being tempted with offers of money to desert Christ, gave this excellent answer, let not any man think, that he will embrace other men's goods to forsake Christ, who hath forsaken his own proper goods to follow Christ. against Satan's temptations, make resistance against temptations by arguments drawn from the honour of God, the love of God, your union and communion with God; and from the blood of Christ, the death of Christ, the kindness of Christ, the intercession of Christ, and the glory of Christ; and from the voice of the Spirit, the counsel of the Spirit, the comforts of the Spirit, the presence of the Spirit, the seal of the Spirit, the whisper of the Spirit, the commands of the Spirit, the assistance of the Spirit, the witness of the Spirit; and from the glory of Heaven, the excellency of grace, the beauty of holiness, the worth of the soul, and the vildness or bitterness, and evil of sin, the least sin being a greater evil, than the greatest temptation in the world. And look that you make constant resistance, as well as strong resistance; be constant in arms, Satan will come on with new temptations; when old Luke 4. 14. And when the Devil had ended all the temptation, he departed from him for a season. Christ had no rest until he was exactly tried with all kinds of temtations. Calvin. ones are too weak in a calm, prepare for a storm; the temper is restless, impudent, and subtle; he will suit his temptations to your constitutions, and inclinations; Satan loves to sail with the wind; if your knowledge be weak, he will tempt you to error; if your consciences be tender, he will tempt you to scrupulosity, and too much preciseness, as to do nothing but hear, pray, read, etc. If your consciences be wide and large, he will tempt you to carnal security; if you are bold spirited, he will tempt you to presumption; if timorous, to desperation; if flexible, to inconstancy; if proud and stiff, to gross folly, therefore still fit for fresh assaults; make one victory a step to another. When you have overcome a temptation, take heed of unbending your bow, and look well to it, that your bow be always bend, and that it remains in strength; when you have overcome one temptation, you must Be ready to enter the list with another; as distrust (in some sense) is the mother of safety, so security is the gate of danger; a man had need to fear this most of all, that he fears not all; if Satan be always a roaring, we should be always a watching, and resisting of him; and certainly, he that makes strong and constant resistance of Satan's temptations, shall in the end get above his temptations, and for the present is secure enough from being ruined by his temptations, etc. For a close of this, remember that 'tis He that will yield to sin, to be rid of temptation, will be so much the more tempted, and the less able to withstand temptations. dangerous, to yield to the least sin, to be rid of the greatest temptation. To take this course were, as if a man should think to wash himself clean in Ink; or as if a man should exchange a light cross made of paper, for an Iron cross which is heavy, toilsome, and bloody, the least sin set home upon the conscience, will more, wound, vex, and oppress the soul, than all the temptations in the world can; therefore never yield to the least sin, to be rid of the greatest temptation. Sidonius Apolinaris relateth, how a certain man named Maximus, arriving at the top of honour, by indirect means, was the first day very much wearied, and fetching a deep sigh, said, Oh Damocles! how happy do I esteem thee, for having been a King but the space of a dinner, I have been one a wholeday, and can bear it no longer. I will leave you to make the Application. The fourth thing to be showed, is, the several ways and devices that Satan hath to destroy and ensnare all sorts and ranks of men in the world. I Shall begin with the honourable and the great, and show you the Devices that Satan hath to destroy them; I will only instance in those that are most considerable. His first Device to destroy the 1 Device. great, and honourable of the earth, is, BY working them, to make it their business to seek themselves, to seek how to greaten themselves, to raise Self-seeking ●●ke the deluge overflows the whole world. themselves, to enrich themselves, to secure themselves, etc. As you may see in Pharaoh, Ahab, Rehoboam, Jeroboam, Absolom, Joab, Haman, etc. But were the Scripture silent, our own experiences do abundantly evidence this way and method of Satan, to destroy the great, and the honourable, to bury their names in the dust, and their souls in Hell, by drawing them wholly to mind themselves, and only to mind themselves, and in all things to mind themselves, and always to mind themselves. All (saith the Apostle) mind Phil. 2. 21. themselves, all comparatively, in respect of the paucity of others, that let fall their private interests, and drown all self-respects in the glory of God, and the public good, etc. Now the Remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan is, solemnly to consider, Self-love is the root of the hatred of others. 2 Tim. 3. 2. First, lovers of themselves, & then fierce, etc. that self-seeking is a sin that will put men upon a world of sin; upon sins not only against the Law of God, the rules of the Gospel, but that are against the very laws of Nature, that are so much darkened by the fall of man; It put the Pharisees upon opposing Christ, and judas upon betraying Christ, and Pilate The Naturalist observes, that those beasts which are most cruel to others, are most loving to their own. upon condemning Christ. It put Gehezi upon lying, and Balaam upon cursing, and Saul and Absolom upon plotting David's ruin. It put Pharaoh and Haman upon contriving ways to destroy those Jews, that God did purpose to save by his mighty arm. It puts men upon using wicked balances, and the bag of deceitful weights. It puts m●n upon ways of oppression, and selling Amos 2. 6. the righteous for silver, and the poor for a pair of shoes, etc. I know not any sin in the world, but this sin of self-seeking will put men upon it, though it be their eternal loss. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that selfseeking doth exceedingly abase A self-seeker is a Cato without, but a Nero within. Domitian would seem to love them best, whom he willed lest should live, & that's the very temper of selfe-seekers. a man; it strips him of all his royalty, and glory; of a Lord, it makes a man become a servant to the creature, I often to the worst of creatures; yea, a slave to slaves, as you may see in judas, Demas, Balaam, and the Scribes and Pharisees. Selfe-seekers bow down to the creatures; as gideon's many thousands bowed down to the waters; selfseeking will make a man say any thing, do any thing, and be any thing, to please the lusts of others, & to get advantages upon others; selfseeking transforms a man into all shapes, and forms; now It was death in Moses Rites to counterfeit that Ceremonial, and figurative ointment, Exod. 30. what shall it then be to counterfeit the spirit of life and holiness. it makes a man appear as an Angel of light, anon as an Angel of darkness; now selfe-seekers are seemingly for God, anon they are openly against God; now you shall have them crying Hosanna in the highest, and anon crucicifie him, crucify him; now you shall have them build with the Saints, and anon you shall have them plotting the overthrow of the Saints, as those selfe-seekers did in Ezra, and Nehemiah's time. Self-seekers are the basest of all persons; there is no service so base, so poor, so low, but they will bow to it. They cannot look neither above, nor beyond their own lusts, and the enjoyment Rom. 1. 25. of the creature, these are the prime and ultimate objects of their intendments. 'Tis said of Tiberius, that whilst Augustus ruled, he was no ways tainted in his reputation; and that whilst Drusus and Germanicus were alive, he feigned those virtues which he had not, to maintain a good opinion of himself in the hearts of the people; but after he had got himself out of the reach of contradiction, and controlment, there was no fact in which he was not faulty, no crime to which he was not accessary. My prayer shall be, that Tiberius his spirit may not be found in any of our Rulers, left it prove their ruin, as it did his; and that where ever it is, it may be detected, loathed, and ejected, that so neither the State, nor souls may be ruined by it, etc. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to dwell upon those dreadful curses, and woes that are from heaven denounced against selfe-seekers. Woe unto them that join Isa. 5. 8. house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth. So Habakkuk, Hab. 6. 9, 10, 11, 12. Crassus' a very rich Roman, and a great self-seeker, for greedy desire of Gold, he managed war against the Parthians, by whom both he & 30000. Romans were slain: and because the Barbarians conjectured that he made this assault upon them for their gold; therefore they melted gold, & poured it into his dead body, saying (satura de auro) satisfy thyself with gold. Isa. 15. 1, 2. Woe to him that increaseth that which is not his, and to him that ladeth himself with thick clay. Woe to him that coveteth an evil covetousness to his house, that he may set his nest on high, that he may be delivered from the power of evil. Thou hast consulted shame to thy house by cutting off many people, and hast sinned against thy soul. For the stone shall cry out of the wall, and the beam out of the timber shall answer it. Woe to him that buildeth a Town with blood, and stablisheth a City by iniquity. The materials of the house built up by oppression, shall come as joynt-witnesses; The stones of the wall shall cry, Lord, we were built up by blood and violence; and the beam shall answer, True Lord, even so it is; The stones shall cry vengeance Lord upon these self-seekers, and the beam shall answer, woe to him, because he built his house with blood. So Isaiah, Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees, and that writ grievousness which they have prescribed. To turn aside the needy from judgement, and to take away the right from the poor of my people; that widows may be their prey, and that they may rob the fatherless. So Amos, Woe Amos 6. 1. 7. unto them that are at ease in Zion, and trust in the mountain of Samaria, which are named chief of the Nations, to whom the house of Israel came. That put far away the evil day, and cause the seat of violence to come near. That lie upon beds of Ivory, and stretch themselves upon their couches, and eat the Lambs out of the flock, and the Calves out of the midst of the stall. That drink wine in bowls, and anoint themselves with the chief ointments, but they are not grieved for the afflictions of Joseph. So Micah, woe to them that devise iniquity, Mica 2. 1, 2. Tacitus the Roman Emperor's word was (sibi bonus aliis malus) he that is too much for himself, fails to be good to others. and work evil upon their beds: when the morning is light they practise it, because it is in the power of their hand. And they covet fields, and take them by violence, and houses, and take them away: so they oppress a man and his house, even a man and his heritage. By these Scriptures, you see, that selfe-seekers labour like a woman in travel, but their birth proves their death, their pleasure their pain; their comfort, their torment; their glory, their shame; their exaltation, their desolation. Loss, disgrace, trouble, and shame, vexation and confusion will be the certain portion of selfe-seekers. When the Tartarians had taken in battle the Duke of Muscovia, they made a cup of his skull, with this inscription, All covet, all lose. The fourth Remedy against this device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that self-seekers are selfe-loosers', and Adam seeks himself, and loses himself, Paradise, and that blessed Image that God had ●amp't upon him. Lot seeks himself, Gen. 13. 10, ●●. and loses himself, and ●is goods, etc. Peter seeks to save himself, and miserably lose himself. Hezekiah in the business of the Ambassadors seeks himself, and loses himself, and his life too, had not God saved him by a Miracle. self-destroyers. Absolom and Judas seek themselves, and hang themselves. Saul seeks himself, and kills himself; Ahab seeks himself, and loses himself, his Crown and Kingdom. Pharaoh seeks himself, and overthrows himself and his mighty Army in the red sea. Cain sought himself, and slew two at once, his brother, and his own soul. Gehazi sought change of raiment, but God changed his raiment into a leprous skin. Haman sought himself, and lost himself. The Princes and the Precedents sought themselves (in the ruin of Daniel) but ruin'd themselves, their wives and children. That which selfe-seekers think should be a staff to support them, becomes (by the hand of Justice) an iron rod to break them; that which they would have as springs to refresh them, becomes a gulf utterly to consume them; the crosses of selfe-seekers shall always exceed their mercies, their pain, their pleasure, their torments, their comforts; every selfe-seeker is a selfe-tormenter, a selfe-destroyer; he carries a hell, an executioner in his own bosom, etc. The fifth Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell much upon the famous examples of those worthy Saints that have denied themselves, and preferred the public good before their own particular advantage: As Moses; And the Lord said unto Moses, let me alone that I may destroy them, and blot out their name from under Heaven, and I will make of thee a Nation mig●●ter, and greater than they; oh! but this offer would not 'Tis good to be of his opinion & mind, who was rather willing to beautify Italy then his own house. take with Moses, he being a man of a brave public spirit, is hot in his desires and prayers that the people might be spared and pardoned; saith he, pardon I beseech thee the iniquity of this people, according unto the greatness of thy mercy, and as thou hast forgiven this people from Egypt until now. And the Lord said, I have pardoned according to thy word. A●●●hould God make such an offer to many that writ themselves Moses, and are called by many, Moses, I am afraid they would prefer their own advantage above the The Ancients were wont to place the Statues of their Princes by their fountains, intimating they were (or at least should be) fountains of the public good. public good; they would not care what become of the people, so they and theirs might be made great and glorious in the world; they would not care so they might have a Babel built for them, though it was upon the ashes, and ruin of the people; base spirits than these are not in hell, no, not in hell, and I am sure there are no such spirits in Heaven; such men's hearts and principles must be changed, or they will be undone for ever. Nehemiah was a A certain great Emperor coming into Egypt, to show the zeal he had for the public good, saith to the Egyptians, draw from me as from your river Nilus. choice soul, a man of a brave public spirit, a man that spent his time, his strength, and his estate for the good and ease of his people. Moreover (saith he) from the time that I was appointed to be their Governor in the Land of Judah, from the twentieth year, even unto the two and thirtieth year of Artaxerxes the King, that is, twelve years; I and my brethren have not eaten the bread of the Governor. Yea, also I continued in the work of this wall, neither bought we any land, and all my servants were gathered thither unto the work. Moreover, there were at my table an hundred and fifty of the Jews and Rulers, besides those that came unto us from among the Heathen that are about us. Now that which was prepared for me daily, was one Ox, and six choice sheep: also fowls were prepared for me, and once in ten day's store of all sorts of wine; yet for all this required not I the bread of the Governor, because the bondage was heavy upon the people. Think upon me, my God, for good, according to all that I have done for this people. So Daniel was a man of a brave public spirit; Then the Precedents and Princes The Counsellor saith a Statesman should be thus tripartited, his will to God, his love to his Master, his heart to his Country, his secret to his friend, his time to busisinesse. sought to find occasion against Daniel, concerning the Kingdom, but they could find no occasion nor fault, for as much as he was faithful, neither was there any error, or fault found in him. Then said these men, we shall not find any occasion against this Daniel, except we find it against him, concerning the law of his God. Christ had a public spirit, he laid out himself, and laid down himself for a public good. Oh! never leave looking and meditating upon these precious and sweet examples, till your souls are quickened, and raised up, to act for the public good, more than for your own particular advantage; many Solomon's Tribunal was underpropt with Lions, to show what spirit, and mettle a Magistrate should be made of. Heathens have been excellent at this. Macrobius writes of Augustus Caesar (in whose time Christ was borne) that he carried such an entire and fatherly affection to the Commonwealth, that he called it (filiam suam) his own daughter, and therefore refused to be called (Dominus) the Lord or Master of his Country, and would only be called (pater patriae) Father of his Country, because he governed it not by fear (per timorem sed per amorem) but by love; the Senate and the people of Rome jointly saluting him, by the name of (pater patriae) Father of his Country. The people very much lamented his death, using that speech, Would he had utinam aut non nasceretur, aut non moreretur. never been borne, or never died. So Marcus Regulus, to save his Country from ruin, exposed himself to the greatest sufferings that the malice and rage of his Enemies could inflict. So Titus and Aristides, and many others have been famous for their preferring the public good above their own advantage. My prayer is, and shall be, that all our Rulers may be so spirited by God, that they may be willing to be any thing, to be nothing, to deny themselves, and to trample their sinful selves under feet, in order to the honour of God, and a public good, that so neither Saints nor Heathens may be witnesses against them in that day, wherein the hearts & practices of all the Rulers in the world shall be open, and bare before him that shall judge the world in Righteousness, and Judgement, etc. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that self is a great let to divine things, therefore the Prophets and Apostles were usually carried out of themselves, when they had the clearest, choicest, highest, and most glorious visions. Selfseeking blinds the soul, that it cannot see a beauty in Christ, nor an excellency in holiness; it distempers the palate, that a man cannot taste sweetness in the word of God, nor in the ways of God, nor in the society of the people of God; it shuts the hand against all the soule-enriching offers of Christ; it hardens the heart against all the knocks and entreaties of Christ; it makes the soul as an empty vine, and as a barren wilderness. Israel is an empty Hosea 10. 1. vine, he brings forth fruit to himself. There is nothing that speaks a man to be more empty, and void of God, Christ, and grace, then selfseeking. The Pharisees Selfe-see●ers with Esau, prefer a mess of pottage above their birthright, and with the men of Shechem, esteem the bramble above the Vine, the Olive, and the figtree, yea empty things above a full Christ▪ & base things above a glorious Christ. were great self-seekers, & great undervaluers of Christ his word & spirit. There is not a greater hindrance to all the duties of piety, then selfseeking; oh! this is that that keeps many a soul from looking after God, and the precious things of eternity; they cannot wait on GOD, nor act for God, nor abide in those ways wherein they might meet with God, by reason of self; selfseeking is that which puts many a man upon neglecting, and slighting the things of his peace; self-seekers will neither go into Heaven themselves, nor suffer others to enter, that are ready to take the Kingdom by violence, as you may see in the Scribes and Pharisees. Oh! but a gracious spirit is acted quite otherways, as you may see in that sweet Scripture, Cant. 7. 13. At our gates are all manner of pleasant fruits, new Cant. 7. 13. and old, which I have laid up for thee oh my beloved. All the Church hath and is, is The Saint's Motto is, Propter te, Domine, propter te. only for him; let others bear fruit to themselves, and lay up for themselves; gracious spirits will hid for Christ, and lay up for Christ; all the divine endeavours, and productions of Saints fall into God's bosom, and empty themselves into his lap. As Christ lays up his merits for them, his graces for them, his comforts for them, his Crown for them: so they lay up all their fruits, and all their loves, all their graces, and The Saint's Motto is, non nobis Domine. all their experience, and all their services, only for him, who is the soul of their comforts, and the crown, and top of all their royalty, and glory, etc. The second Device that Satan 2 Device. hath to ensnare, and destroy the great and honourable of the earth, is, BY engaging them against the people of the most high, against those that are his jewels, his pleasant portion, the delight of his eye, and the joy of his heart, etc. Thus he drew Pharaoh to engage Exod. 14. against the children of Israel, and that was his overthrow. So he engaged Hester 7. Haman against the jews, and so brought him to hang upon that gallows that he had made for Mordecai. So he engaged Dan. 6. those Princes and Precedents against Daniel, which was the utter ruin of them and their relations. So in Revel. 20. Revel. 20. 7, 8, 9 7, 8, 9 And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison. And he shall go out to deceive the Nations which are in the four quarters of the earth▪ Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle: whose number is as the sand of the Sea. And they went up upon the breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp of the Saints about, and the beloved City: and fire came down from God out of Heaven, and consumed them. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that none have engaged against the As they said once of the Grecians in the Epigram, whom they thought invulnerable; we shoot at them, but they fall not down, we wound them, and not kill them, etc. Saints, but have been ruined by the God of Saints; divine justice hath been too hard for all that have opposed and engaged against the Saints, as is evident in Saul, Pharaoh, Haman, etc. He reproved Kings for their sakes, saying, Touch not mine anointed, nor do my Prophets no harm; when men of Balaams' spirit tnd principles have been engaged against the Saints, how hath the Angel of the Lord met them in the way, and jusled their bones against the wall? how hath he broke their backs, and necks, and by his drawn sword cut them off in the prime of their days, and in the height of their sins? Ah! what a harvest hath hell had Tanto plas gloriae referemus quoniam eo plures superabimus, the number of opposers makes the Christians conquest the more illustrious, said Paedarelus in Erasmus. in our days, of those who have engaged against the Lamb, and those that are called chosen and faithful? ah how hath divine Justice poured out their blood as water upon the ground? how hath he laid their honour and glory in the dust? who in the pride, and madness of their hearts said, as Pharaoh, we will pursue, we will overtake, we will divide the spoil, our lusts shall be satisfied upon them: we will draw our sword, our hand shall destroy them; in the things wherein they have spoken & done proudly, Justice hath been above them. History abounds in nothing more than in instances of this kind, etc. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is to dwell sometime every morning upon these following Scriptures, wherein God hath engaged himself to stand by his people, and for his people, and to make them victorious over the greatest, and wisest of their enemies. Isa. 8. 9, 10. Associate yourselves (saith the Lord by the Prophet) oh ye people, and Occidit poterant sed vinci non poterant, said Cyprian of the Christians in his time. and ye shall be broken in pieces, and give ear, all ye of far Countries: gird yourselves & ye shall be broken in pieces gird yourselves and ye shall be broken in pieces. Take counsel together, and it shall come to nougbt: speak the word, and it shall not stand, for God is with us. Fear not thou worm Jacob, Isa. 41. 14, 15. and ye men of Israel, I will help thee saith the Lord, and thy Redeemer the holy one of Israel. Behold, I will make thee a new sharp threshing instrument having teeth, thou shalt thresh the mountains, and beat them small, and shalt make the hills as chaff. Verse 16. Thou shalt fan them, and the wind shall carry them away, and the whirlwind shall scatter them, and thou shalt rejoice in the Lord, and shalt glory in the holy one of Israel. No weapon that is form against Isa. 54. 17. thee shall prosper, and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgement, thou shalt condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, and their righteousness is of me saith the Lord. Now also many Mica 4. 11. Nations are gathered together against thee, that say, let her be defiled, and let our eye look upon Zion. But they know not Verse 12. the thoughts of the Lord, neither understand they his counsel; for he shall gather them as the sheaves into the floor. Arise and thresh Verse 13. oh daughter of Zion, for I will make thy horn iron, and I will make thy hoofs brass, and thou shalt beat in pieces many people, and I will consecrate their gain unto the Lord, and their substance unto the Lord of the Zach. 12. 2, 3. whole earth. Behold, I will make Jerusalem a cup of trembling unto all the people round about, when they shall be in the siege both against Judah and against Jerusalem. And in that day will I make Jerusalem a burden some stone for all people, all that burden themselves with it shall be cut in pieces, though all the people of the earth be gathered together against it. The 3. Remedy against this device of 3 Remedy. Satan, is, to consider, that you cannot engage against the Saints, but you must Acts 5. 39 It seems to be drawn from the sable of the Giants, which were said to make War with the Gods. engage against God himself, by reason of that near, and blessed union that is between God and them; you cannot be fighters against the Saints, but you will be found in the casting up of the account, to be fighters against God himself; and what greater madness, then for weakness itself to engage against an almighty strength; the near union that is between the Lord and Believers, is set forth by that near union that is betwixt a husband and his Wife. The soul's happiness consists not in any thing but in its union with God; nor its misery lies not so much in any thing, as in its disunion from God. (They two shall be one flesh; This is a great Mystery, but I speak concerning Christ & the Church) We are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones, saith the Apostle: This near union is set forth by that union that is between the head and the members, which make up one body, and by that union that is betwixt the graft and the stock, which are made one by inscition. The union between the Lord and a Believer is so near, that you cannot strike a Believer, but the Lord is sensible of it, and takes it as done to himself, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Acts 9 4. Isa. 63. 9 me? And in all their afflictions he was afflicted, etc. Ah souls! who ever engaged against God, and prospered? who ever took up the sword against him, but perished by it? God can speak you to hell, and nod you to hell at pleasure; 'tis your greatest concernment to lay down your weapons at his feet, and to Psal. 2. 12. kiss the son lest he be angry, and you perish in the midway. The 4th Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan is, solemnly to consider, that Hic homo potuit apud Deum quod voluit. Said one concerning Luther, he could have what he would of God. you are much engaged to the Saints (as instruments) for the mercies that you do enjoy, and for the preventing and removing of many a judgement, that otherwise might have been your ruin, before this day; were it not for the Saints sake, God would quickly make the Heavens to be as brass, and the Earth as iron, God would quickly strip thee of thy Robes, and glory, and set thee upon the dunghill with Job: They are the props that bear the world from falling about thy ears, and that keep the iron rod from breaking of thy bones. Therefore he said that he would Psal. 106. 23. destroy them, had not Moses his chosen stood before him in the breach, to turn away Prayer is (porta coeli, clavis Paradisi) the gate of Heaven, a key to let us into Paradise. his wrath, lest he should destroy them. Ah! had not the Saints many a time cast themselves into the breach, betwixt God's wrath and you, you had been cut off from the land of the living, and have had your portion with those, whose names are written in the dust; When the danger is over the Saint is forgotten, is a French Proverb, and that which many Saints in England have found by experience. many a Nation, many a City, and many a Family is surrounded with blessings for the joseph's sakes that live therein, and are preserved from many calamities and miseries, for the Moseses, the daniel's, the Noah's, and the Jobs sakes, that dwell amongst them. That's a sweet word, Prov. 10. 25. As the whirlwind passeth, so is the wicked no more: but the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jesodh gnolam from Josadh. righteous is an everlasting foundation, or is the foundation of the world; the righteous is the foundation of the world, which but for their sakes would soon shatter, and fall to ruin: so the Psalmist, Psal. 75. 3. The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved, I bear up the pillars of it. Selah. Marry Queen of Scots, that was Mother to King James, was wont to say, that she feared Mr. Knox's prayer more than an Army of ten thousand men. The Emperor Marcus Antonius, being in Almany with his Army, was enclosed in a dry Country by his enemies, who so stopped all the passages, that he and his Army were like to perish for want of water; the Emperor's Lieutenant seeing him so distressed, told him that he had heard, that the Christians could obtain any thing of their God, by their prayers; whereupon the Emperor having a legion of Christians in his Army, desired them to pray to their God, for his and the Army's delivery out of that danger; which they presently did, & presently a great Thunder fell amongst the enemies, and abundance of water upon the Romans, whereby their thirst was quenched, and the enemies overthrown without any fight. I shall close up this last Remedy, with those sweet words of the Psalmist. In Judah is God known, his name is great Ps. 76. 1, 2, 3. in Israel: In Salem also is his Tabernacle, and his dwelling place in Zion. There broke he the arrows of the bow, the shield, and the sword, and the bettell. Selah. Secondly, Satan hath his Devices to ensnare and destroy the Learned and the Wise, and that sometimes BY working them to pride themselves John 5. ●4. in their parts and abilities; 1 Kings 22. 22, 23, 24, 25. 1 Cor. 1. 18. to 29. and sometimes by drawing them to rest upon their parts and abilities, & sometimes by causing them to make light and slight of those that want their parts The truth of this you may see i'the learned Scribes and Pharisees. and abilities, though they excel them in grace and holiness; and sometimes by drawing them to engage their parts and abilities, in those ways and things that make against the honour of Christ, the joy of the spirit, the advancement of the Gospel, and the liberty of the Saints, etc. Now the Remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that you have nothing but what you have received; Christ being as well the fountain of common gifts, as of saving 1 Cor. 4. 7. Quicquid es debes creanti, Quicquid potes debes redimenti, said Bern. Whatsoever thou art, thou owest to him that made thee, & whatever thou hast, thou owest to him that redeemed thee. grace. What hast thou (saith the Apostle) that thou hast not received? And if thou hast received it, why dost thou glory as though thou hadst not received it? There are those that would hammer out their own happiness, like the Spider climbing up by the thread of her own weaving; of all the parts and abilities that be in you, you may well say, as the young man did of his Hatchet, Alas Master! it was but borrowed; Alas Lord! all I have is but borrowed from that Fountain that fills all the Vessel in Heaven, and on Earth, and it overflows; my gifts are not so much mine, 1 Chro. 29. 14. as thine: Of thine own have we offered unto thee, said that Princely Prophet, etc. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that men's leaning and trusting to their own wits, parts, and abilities, have been their utter overthrow, and ruin; General counsels were seldom successful, because men came with confidence, leaning to their own understanding, and seeking for victory rather than verity, saith one. as you may see in Achitophel, and those Precedents and Princes that engaged against Daniel, and in the Scribes and Pharisees; God loves to confute men in their Confidences; he that stands upon his parts and abilities, doth but stand upon a quicksand, that will certainly fail him. There is nothing in the world that provokes God more to withdraw from the soul, than this, and how can the soul stand when his strength is departed from him? Every thing that a man leans upon, but God, will be a dart that will certainly pierce his heart through and through; ah! how many in these days have lost their estates? their friends? their lives? their souls? by leaning upon their admired parts and abilities? The Saints are described Cant. 8. 5. by their leaning upon their beloved the Lord Jesus; he that leans only upon the bosom of Christ, lives the highest, choicest, safest, and sweetest life; miseries always lie at that man's door, that leans upon any thing below the precious bosom of Christ. Such a man is most in danger, and this is none of his least plagues, that he thinks himself secure. 'Tis the greatest wisdom in the world, to take the wise man's counsel. Trust in the Lord with all thy Prov. 3. 5. heart, and lean not to thine own understanding. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is to consider, that you do not transcend others, more in parts and abilities, than they do you in Judas and the Scribes & Pharisees, had great parts, but no grace, the Disciples had grace, but weak parts. grace and holiness, there may be, and often is great parts and abilities where there is but little grace, yea no grace; and there may be, and often is, a great deal of grace, where there is but weak parts and abilities; you may be higher than others in gifts of knowledge, utterance, learning, etc. and those very souls may be higher than you in their communion with God, in their delighting Luke 11. 1. Mark 8. 31, 32, 33. Luke 24. 19 to 28. in God, in their dependence upon God, in their affections to God, and in their humble, holy, and unblamable walking before God; Is it folly and madness in a man, to make light and slight of another, because he is not so rich in lead, or iron, as he, when he is a thousand thousand times richer in silver and in gold, in Jewels, and in Pearls, than he? And is it not madness and folly with a witness, in those that have greater parts and abilities than others, ●o slight them upon that account, when that those very persons, that they make light and slight of, have a thousand times more grace than they? And yet ah! how doth this evil spirit prevail in the world? 'Twas the sad complaint of Austin in his time, The unlearned (said Surgeant indocti & rapiunt coelum & nos cum doctrinis nostris detrudimur in gehennam. he) rise up, and take Heaven by violence, and we with all our learning are thrust down to hell; 'tis sad to see, how many of the Rabbis of these times, do make an Idol of their parts and abilities; and with what an eye of pride, scorn, and contempt do they look upon those that want their parts, and that do not worship the idol that they have set up in their own hearts. Paul who was the great Doctor of the Gentiles, did wonderfully transcend in all parts and abilities, the Doctors and Rabbis of our times, and yet ah! how humbly, how tenderly, how sweetly doth he carry himself towards the meanest and the 1 Cor 9 22. 2 Cor. 11. 29. weakest; To the weak I became as weak, that I might win the weak; I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some. Who is weak, and I am not weak? who is offended, and I burn not? Wherefore, if meat make my brother to offend, I will ea● no flesh while the World standeth, lest I make my brother to offend. But ah! how little of this sweet spirit is to be found in the Doctors of our age, who look sourly, & speak bitterly against those that do not see as they see, nor cannot speak as they speak. Sirs, the spirit of Isa. 60. 13, 14, 15, 16, 17. the Lord (even in despised Saints) will be too hard for you, and his appearances in them, in these latter days, will be so full of spiritual beauty and glory, as that they will darken that, that you are too apt to count and call your glory; the spirit of the Lord will not suffer his choicest jewel grace, to be always buried under the straw, and stubble of parts and gifts. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that there Becanus saith, that the tree of Knowledge bears many leaves, and little fruit; ah! that it were not so with many in these days, who once did outshine the stars, etc. is no such way for men to have their gifts and parts blasted, and withered, as to pride themselves in them, as to rest upon them, as to make light and slight of those that want them, as to engage them against those persons, ways, and things that Jesus Christ hath set his heart upon. Ah! how hath God blasted, and withered the parts and abilities of many among us, that have once been famous shining lights, how is their sun darkened, and their glory clouded? How Zech. 11. 17. is the sword of the Lord upon their arm, and upon their right eye? How is their arm clean dried up, and their right eye utterly darkened? as the Prophet speaks. This is matter of humiliation and lamentation; many precious discerning Saints do see this, and in secret mourn for it; and oh! that they were kindly sensible of Gods withdrawing from them, that they may repent, keep humble, and carry it sweetly towards God's Jewels, and lean only upon the Lord, and not upon their parts and understanding, that so the Lord may delight to visit them with his grace, at such a rate, as that their faces may shine more gloriously than ever, and they may be more serviceable to the honour of Christ, and the faith of the Saints, then formerly they have been, etc. Thirdly, Satan hath his Devices to destroy the Saints, & one great Device that he hath to destroy the Saints, is, BY working them first to be strange, Gal 5. 15. If we knock, we break▪ dissolution is the d●●ghter of dissension. and then to divide, and then to be bi●er and jealous, and then to by't and devour one another; our own woeful experience is too great a proof of this. The Israelites in Egypt did not more vex one another, than Christians in these days have done, which occasioned a deadly consumption to fall upon some. Now the remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell more upon one another's graces, then upon one another's weaknesses and infirmities: 'tis sad to consider, that Saints should have Flavius Vespasianus (the Emperor) was more ready to conceal the vices of his friends, than their virtues; can you think seriously of this Christians (that a Heathen should excel you) & not blush? 2 Cor. 2. 7, 8. many eyes to behold one another's infirmities, and not one eye to see each others graces; that they should use spectacles to behold one another's weaknesses, rather than looking glasses to behold one another's graces. Erasmus tells of one, who collected all the lame and defective Verses in Homer's works, but passed over all that were excellent; ah! that this were not the practice of many that shall at last meet in Heaven, that they were not careful and skilful to collect all the weaknesses of others, and to pass over all those things that are excellent in them. The Corinthians did eye more the incestuous persons sin, than his sorrow, which was like to have drowned him in sorrow. Tell me Saints, is it not a more sweet, comfortable, and delightful thing, to look more upon one another's graces, then upon one another's infirmities? Tell me, what pleasure, what delight, what comfort is there in looking upon the enemies, the wounds, the sores, the sicknesses, the diseases, the nakedness of our friends? Now sin you know, is the souls enemy, the souls wound, the souls sores, the souls sickness, the souls Non Gens, sed mens, non Genus sed Genius, Not race, or place, but grace, truly sets forth a m●n. disease, the souls nakedness; and ah! what a heart hath that man that loves thus to look? Grace is the choicest flower in all a Christians garden, 'tis the richest Jewel in all his Crown, 'tis his Princely Robes, 'tis the top of Royalty, and therefore must needs be the most pleasing, sweet, and delightful object for a gracious eye to be fixed upon. Sin is darkness, grace is light, sin is hell, grace is Heaven; and what madness is it, to look more at darkness, then at light; more at hell, then at Heaven? Jam. 5. 11. 2. 25. 1 Pet. 2. 6. vide. Sin is Satan's work, Grace is God's work● & is it not most ●●●et that the child should eye most, and mind most his Father's work, etc. T●ll me Saints, doth not God look more upon his people graces, then upon their weaknesses, surely he doth; he looks more at david's and Asa's uprightness, then upon their infirmities, though they were great and many; he eyes more Job's patience, than his passion, Remember the patience of Job, not a word of his impatience, etc. He that drew Alexander whilst he had a scar upon his face, drew him with his finger upon the scar; God puts his finger upon his people's scars, that no blemish may appear; ah Saints! that you would make it the top of your glory in this, to be like your heavenly Father; by so doing, much sin would be prevented, the designs of wicked men frustrated, Satan out-witted, many wounds healed, many sad hearts cheered, and God more abundantly honoured, etc. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, i●, solemnly to consider, that love and unity makes most for your own safety, and security. We shall There was a Temple of Concord amongst the Heathens, and shall it not be found among Christians, that are Temples of the holy Ghost. be insuperabiles, if we be inseperabiles, invincible, if we be inseparable. The world may frown upon you, and plot against you, but they cannot hurt you; unity is the best bond of safety, in every Church and Commonwealth. And this did that Scythian King in Plutark, represent lively to his 80 Sons, when being ready to die, he commanded a bundle of Arrows fast bound together, to be given to his Sons to break, they all tried to break them, but being bound fast together, they could not, than he caused the band to be cut, & then they Pancirollus saith, that the most precious pearl among the Romans was called unio union. broke them with ease: he applied it thus; My Sons, so long as you keep together, you will be invincible, but if the band of union be broke betwixt you, you will easily be broken in ●ieces. Pliny writes of a stone in the Island of Scyrus, that if it be whole, though a large and heavy one, it swims above water, but being broken, it sinks: so long as Saints keep whole, nothing shall sink them, but if they break, they are in danger of sinking and drowning, etc. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is to dwell upon those commands of God that do require you To act, or run cross to Gods express command, though under pretence of Revelation from God, is as much as a man's life is worth, as you may see in that sad story, 1 Kings 13. 24. to love one another; oh! when your hearts begin to rise against each other, charge the Commands of God upon your hearts, and say to your souls, oh our souls! hath not the eternal God commanded you to love them that love the Lord? And is it not life to obey, and death to rebel? Therefore look that you fulfil the commands of the Lord, for his commands are not like those that are easily reversed, but they are like those of the Medes that cannot be changed. Oh! be much in pondering upon these Commands of God; A new Commandment I give unto you, that ye John 13. 34. love one another as I have loved you; that ye also love one another. 'Tis called a new Some conceive it to be an Hebraisme, in which language, new, rare, and most excellent are Synonima's. John 15. 12. 17. commandment, because 'tis renewed in the Gospel, and set home by Christ's example, and because 'tis rare, choice, special, and remarkable above all others. This is my commandment, that ye love one another as I have loved you. These things I command you, that ye love one another. Own no man any thing, but love one another; for he that loveth another, hath Rom. 13. 8. fulfilled the Law. Let brotherly love continue. Heb. 13. 1. Love one another, for love is of 1 john. 4. 7. God: And every one that loveth is borne of 1 Pet. 1. 22. God, and knoweth God. See that ye love Chap. 3. v. 8. one another with a pure heart fervently. Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another. Love as brethren, be pitiful, be courteous. For this is the message 1 john 3. 11. that ye heard from the beginning, that we should love one another. And this is his Verse 23. Commandment, that we should believe on the name of his son Jesus Christ, and love one another as he gave us commandment. Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought to love Chap. 4. v. 11. one another. Oh! dwell much upon these precious commands, that your love may be The Ancients use to say commonly that Alexander and Ephestion had but one soul in two distinct bodies, because their joy and sorrow, glory, and disgrace was mutual to them both. inflamed one to another. In the primitive times it was much taken notice of by the Heathens, that in the depth of misery, when fathers and mothers forsook their children, Christians (otherwise strangers) stuck one to another, whose love of Religion proved firmer than that of nature. Ah! that there were more of that spirit among the Saints in these days. The world was once destroyed with water, for the heat of lusts, and 'tis thought it will be again destroyed with fire, for the coldness of love. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell more upon those choice and sweet things, wherein you agree, then upon those things wherein you differ; ah! did you but thus, how would sinful heats be abated, and your love raised, and your spirits sweetened one to another; you agree in most, you differ but in a few; you agree in the greatest, and weightiest; as concerning God, Christ, the spirit, the Scripture, etc. you differ only in those points that have been long disputable amongst men of greatest piety, and parts; you agree to own the Scripture, to hold to Christ the Head, and to walk What a sad thing was it that a Heathen should say, No beasts are so mischievous to men, as Christians are one to another. according to the laws of the new creature. Shall Herod and Pilate agree? shall Turks and Pagans agree? shall Bears and Lions, Tigers and Wolves, yea, shall a legion of Devils agree in one body? and shall not Saints agree, who differ only in such things as have least of the heart of God in them? and that shall never hinder your meeting in heaven, etc. The fifth Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that God delights to be styled (Deus pacis) the God of peace; and Christ to be styled 2 Cor. 13. 11. Isa. 9 6. Vbi pax ibi Christus, quia Christus pax, where peace is, there is Christ, because Christ is peace. (Princeps pacis) the Prince of peace; and King of Salem, that is, King of Peace; and the Spirit is a spirit of Peace. The fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, Gal. 5. 22. Oh! why then should not the Saints be children of peace? Certainly men of froward, unquiet, fiery spirits cannot have that sweet evidence of their interest in the God of Peace, and in the Prince of Peace, and in the spirit of Peace, as those precious souls have that follow after the things that make for love and peace. The very name of peace Dulce nomen pacis said the Orator. The Grecians had the statue of peace with Pluto, the god of Riches in her Arms. is sweet and comfortable; the fruit and effect thereof pleasant, and profitable, more to be desired then innumerable Triumphs; 'Tis a blessing that ushers in a multitude of other blessings. The Ancients were wont to paint Peace in the form of a Woman, with a horn of plenty in her hand. Ah! peace and love among the Saints is that which will secure them, and their mercies at home; yea, it will multiply their mercies, it will engage the God of mercy to crown them with the choicest mercies, and 'tis that will render them most terrible, invincible, and successful abroad; love and peace among the Saints, is that which puts the counsels of their Enemies to a stand, and renders all their erterprises abortive; 'tis that which doth most weaken their hands, wound their hopes, and kill their hearts, etc. The sixth Remedy against this Device 6 Remedy. of Satan, is, to make more care and conscience of keeping up your peace There is no fear of knowing too much, but there is much fear in practising too little. with God; ah Christians! I am afraid, that your remissness herein is that which hath occasioned much of that sourness, bitterness, and divisions that be among you; ah! you have not as you should kept up your peace with God; and therefore 'tis that you do so dreadfully break the peace among yourselves. The Lord hath promised, That Prov. 16. 7. when a man's ways please him, he will make his enemies to be at peace with him; ah! Pharnaces sent a Crown to Caesar at the same time he rebelled against him▪ but he returned the Crown, & this message back (faceret imperata prius) let him return to his obedience first; there is no sound peace to be had with God or man, but in a way of obedience. how much more than would God make the children of peace to keep the Peace among themselves, if their ways did but please him? All creatures are at his beck and check. Laban followed Jacob with one Troup, Esau met him with another, both with hostile intentions; but jacob's ways pleasing the Lord, God by his mighty power so works, that Laban leaves him with a kiss, and Esau meets him with a kiss; he hath an oath of one, tears of the other, and peace with both; if we make it our business to keep up our league with God, God will make it his work, and his glory to maintain our peace with men; but if men make light of keeping up their peace with God, 'tis just with God to leave them to a spirit of pride, envy, passion, contention, division, and confusion, to leave them to by't and devour one another, till they be consumed one of another, etc. The seventh Remedy against this Device 7 Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell much upon that near relation, and union that is between you; this consideration had a sweet influence upon Abraham's heart. And Abraham said unto Lot, Let there be Gen. 13. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oh let there be no bitterness between us, for we are brethren. no strife I pray thee, between me and thee, and between my herdsmen, and thy herdsmen, for we be brethren. That is a sweet word in the Psalmist; Behold, how good, and how pleasant it is for brethren to live together in unity. It is not good, and not pleasant; The party coloured coats were characters of the King's children, so is following after peace now. or pleasant and not good, but good and pleasant; there be some things that be (bona sed non jucunda) good, and not pleasant, as patience and discipline; and there be some things that are pleasant, but not good, as carnal pleasures, voluptuousness, etc. and there are some things that are neither good, nor pleasant, as malice, envy, worldly sorrow, etc. and there are some things that are both good and pleasant, as piety, charity, peace and union among brethren; and oh! that we could see more of this among those that shall one day meet (in their Father's Kingdom) and never part, etc. And as they are brethren, so they are all fellow-members. Now ye are the body of 1 Cor. 12. 27. Christ, and members in particular. And again, We are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones. Shall Ephes. 5. 30. the members of the natural body be serviceable, and useful to one another, and shall the members of this spiritual body cut, and destroy one another? Is it against the Law of Nature for the natural members to cut, and slash one another? and is it not much more against the Law of Nature, and of grace, for the members of Christ's glorious body to do so? And as you are all fellow-members, so you are all fellow-soldiers Revel. 12 7, 8. Heb. 2. 10. under the same Captain of salvation, the Lord Jesus, fight against the world, the flesh, and the Devil. And as you are all fellow-soldiers, so are you all fellow-sufferers under the same enemies, the Devil, and the Revel. 2. 10. world. And as you are all fellow-sufferers, John 15. 19▪ 20. Heb. 13. 1●. Heb. 1●. ●●. so are you fellow-travellers towards the Land of Canaan, the new Jerusalem that is above. Here we have no abiding City, but we look for one to come; the heirs of Heaven are strangers on earth. And as you are all fellow▪ travellers, so are you all fellow-heirs of Rom. 8. 17. the same Crown and inheritance. The eighth Remedy against this Device 8 Remedy. of Satan, is, to dwell upon the miseries of discord; dissolution is the Our dissensions are one of the Jews greatest stumbling blocks; can you think of it, and your hearts not bleed? daughter of dissension; ah! how doth the name of Christ, and the way of Christ suffer by the discord of Saints? how are many that are entering upon the ways of God hindered, and sadded, and the mouths of the wicked opened, and their hearts hardened against God, and his ways, by the discord of his people? Remember this, the disagreement of Christians is the Devil's triumph; and what a sad thing is this, that Christians should give Satan cause to triumph. 'Twas a notable saying of one, take away strife, and call bacl peace, lest thou lose a man thy friend, and the Devil an enemy joy over you both, etc. The ninth Remedy against this Device 9 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that 'tis no disparagement to you to be first in seeking peace, and reconcilement, but rather an honour to you, They shall both have the name, and the note, the comfort, and the credit of being most like unto God, who first begin to pursue after peace. that you have begun to seek peace. Abraham was the elder, and more worthy than Lot, both in respect of grace, and nature also (for he was uncle unto Lot) and yet he first seeks peace of his inferior, which God hath recorded as his honour. Ah! how doth the God of peace by his spirit, and messengers pursue after peace with poor creatures. God first makes offers of peace to us. Now than we are Ambassadors for Christ, as 2 Cor. 5. 20. though God did beseech you by us: we pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God God's grace first knelt to us, and who can turn their backs upon such blessed, and bleeding embracements; but soul●, in whom Satan the God of this world kings it? God is the party wronged, and yet he sues for peace with us at first. I said, Isa. 65. 1. behold me, behold me, unto a Nation that was not called by my name; ah! how doth Behold me, behold me, 'tis geminated to show God's exceeding forwardness to show savour and mercy to them. the sweetness, the freeness, and the riches of his grace break forth, and shine upon poor souls. When a man goes from the sun, yet the sunbeams follow him: so when we go from the Sun of Righteousness, yet then the beams of his love and mercy follow us. Christ first sent to Peter that had denied him, and the rest that had forsaken him; Go your ways, and tell his Disciples and Peter, that he goeth before you into Galilee, Mark 16. 7. there shall ye see him, as he said unto you. Ah souls! 'tis not a base, low thing, but a Godlike thing, though we are wronged by others, yet to be the first in seeking after peace, such actings will speak out much of God with a man's spirit, etc. Christians! 'tis not matter of liberty, whether you will, or you will not pursue after peace; but 'tis matter of duty that lies upon you, you are bound by express precepts to follow after peace; and though it may seem to fly from you, yet you must pursue after it. Fellow Heb. 12. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it signifies to follow after peace, as the persecutor doth him whom he persecuteth. Psal. 34. 14. peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord. Peace and holiness is to be pursued after with the greatest eagerness that can be imagined: So the Psalmist, Depart from evil, and do good, seek peace, and pursue it; the Hebrew word that is here rendered seek is in Pihil, and it signifies to seek earnestly, vehemently, affectionately, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 studiously, industriously, and pursue it: that Hebrew word signifies earnestly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to pursue, being a Metaphor taken from the eagerness of wild Beasts, or ravenous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fowls, which will run, or fly both fast, and far, rather than be disappointed of their prey. So the Apostle presses the same duty upon the Romans, Let us follow after the things that make for Rom. 14. 19 peace, and things wherewith one m●y edify another. Ah! you froward, sour, dogged Christians, can you look upon these commands of God without tears, and blushing? I have read a remarkable story of Aristippus, though but a Heathen, Plutarch. who went of his own accord to Aeschines his enemy, and said, shall we never be reconciled, till we become a Table-talk to all the Country? And when Eschines answered, he would most gladly be at peace with him; Remember then said Aristippus, that though I were the elder and better man, yet I sought first unto thee. Thou art indeed said Aeschines, a far better man than I; for I began the quarrel, but thou the reconcilement. My prayer shall be, that this Heathen may not rise in judgement against the flourishing Professors of our times; Who whet their tongues like Psal. 64. 3. a sword, and bend their bows to shoot their arrows, even bitter words. The tenth Remedy against this device 10 Remedy. of Satan, is, for Saints to join together, and walk together in the ways of grace and holiness, so far as they do agree, making the word the only touchstone, and judge of their actions. That is sweet advice that the Apostle gves; I press toward the mark for the price of the Phil. 3. 14. high calling of God, in Christ Jesus. Let Verse 15. us therefore as many as be perfect (comparatively, or conceitedly so) be thus minded: and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you. Nevertherlesse, whereto we have already attained, Verse 16. let us walk by the same rule, let us mind the same thing. Ah Christians! God loses much, and you lose much, and Satan gains much by this, that you do not, that you will not walk lovingly together, so far as your ways lie together; 'Tis your sin and shame that you do not, that you will not pray together, and hear together, and confer together, and mourn together, etc. because that Great is the power of joynt-prayer. Marry Queen of Scots, said, she seared more the prayers of Mr. Knox, and his accomplices, than an Army of 30000. men. in some far lesser things you are not agreed together; what folly and madness is it in those, whose way of a hundred miles lies fourscore and nineteen together, yet will not walk so far together, because that they cannot go the other mile together; yet such is the folly and madness of many Christians in these days, who will not do many things they may do, because they cannot do every thing they should do. I fear God will whip them into a better temper before he hath done with them; He will break their bones, and pierce their hearts; but he will cure them of this malady, etc. And be sure you make the word the only Touchstone, and Judge of all persons and actions. To the Law and to Isa. 8. 20. the Testimony, if they speak not according to this word, 'tis because there is no light in them. 'Tis best and safest, to make that to be the judge of all men, and things now, that all shall be judged by in the latter day. The word (saith Christ) john 12. 48. that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day. Make not your dim light, your notions, your fancies, your opinions, the Judge of men's actions, but still judge by rule, and plead, 'tis written, when a vain, importunate soul cried out in contest with a holy man, hear me, hear me; the holy man answered, Neither hear me, nor I thee, but Nec ego te, nec tu me, sed ambo audiamus Apostulum. let us both hear the Apostle. Constantine in all the disputes before him with the Arrians, would still call for the word of God, as the only way, if not to convert, yet to stop their mouths, etc. The 11. Remedy against this Device 11 Remedy. of Satan, is, to be much in self-judging. 1 Cor. 11. 31. Judge yourselves, and you shall not be judged of the Lord: ah! were Christians It's storied of Nero himself, being unclean, he did think there was no man chaste. hearts more taken up in judging themselves, and condemning themselves, they would not be so apt to judge and censure others, and to carry it sowrly, and bitterly towards others that differ from them. There are no souls in the world, that are so fearful to judge others, as In the Olympic games, the wrestlers did not put their Crowns upon their own heads, but upon the heads of others; 'tis so with souls, that are good at selfejudging. those that do most judge themselves, nor so careful to make a righteous judgement of men, or things, as those that are most careful to judge themselves. There are none in the world that tremble to think evil of others, to speak evil of others, or to do evil to others, as those that make it their business to judge themselves; there are none that make such sweet constructions, and charitable interpretations of men, and things, as those that are best, and most in judging themselves. One request I have to you, that are much in judging others, and little in judging yourselves; to you that are so apt, and prone to judge rashly, falsely, and unrighteously, and that is, that you will every morning dwell a little upon these Scriptures. Judge not that ye be not judged. For Math. 7. 1. with what judgement ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measures ye meet, it Verse 2. shall be measured to you again. Judge not according john 7. 24. to appearance, but judge righteous judgement. Let not him that eateth not, judge Rom. 14. 3. him that eateth, for God hath received him. Why dost thou judge thy brother? or why dost Verse 10. thou set at nought thy brother? we shall all stand before the judgement-seat of Christ. Let us not judge one another any more, but Versa 13. judge this rather, that no man put a stumbling block, or an occasion to fall in his brother's way. Judge nothing before the time, 1 Cor. 4. 5. until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will manifest the counsels of the hearts, and then shall every man have praise of God. Speak not evil one of another (brethren) jam. 4. 11. he that speaketh evil of his brother, and judgeth his brother, speaketh evil of the Law, & judgeth the Law; but if thou judgest the Law, thou art not a doer of the law, but a Judge. There is one Lawgiver, who Verse 12. is able to save, and to destroy: who art thou that judgest another? who art thou that judgest Rom. 14. 4. another man's servant? to his own Master he standeth or falleth: yea, he shall be holden up, for God is able to make him stand. One Delphidius accusing another before Julian, about that which he could not prove; the party denying the fact, Delphidius answers, if it be sufficient to deny what is laid to one's charge, who shall be found guilty? julian answers, and if it be sufficient to be accused, who can be innocent? You are wise, and know how to apply it. The 12. Remedy against this Device 12 Remedy. of Satan is this. Above all, labour to be 1 Pet. 5. 5. clothed with humility. Humility makes a man peaceable among brethren, fruitful in well doing, cheerful in suffering, and constant in holy walking; humility fits for the highest services we own to Christ, and yet will not neglect john 13. 5. the lowest service to the meanest Saint. Humility can feed upon the meanest dish, and yet 'tis maintained by the choicest delicates, as God, Christ, and glory; Humility will make a man bless him, that curses him, and pray for those that persecute him. An humble heart is a habitation for God, a scholar Humility is (conservatrix vir virtutum) saith Bernard, that which keeps all graces together. for Christ, a companion for Angels, a preserver of grace, and a fit for glory. Humility is the nurse of our graces, the preserver of our mercies, and the great promoter of holy duties. Humility cannot find three things on this side Heaven; it cannot find fullness in the creature, nor sweetness in sin, nor life in an Ordinance without Christ. An humble soul always finds three things on this side Heaven; the soul to be empty, Christ to be full, and every mercy and duty to be sweet, wherein God is enjoyed. Humility can weep over other men's weaknesses, and joy, and rejoice over their graces. Humility will make a man 1 Thes. 1. 2, 3. quiet, and contented in the meanest condition, and 'twill preserve a man from envying others prosperous condition. Humility honours those that are strong in grace, and puts two hands Ephes. 3. 8. under those that are weak in grace. Humility makes a man richer than other men, and it makes a man judge himself the poorest among men. Humility will see much good abroad, when it can see but little at home; Ah Christians! though faith be the champion of grace, and love thee nurse of grace, yet humility is the beautifier of grace; it casts a general glory upon all the graces in the soul; ah! did Christians more abound in humility, The humble soul is like the violet, which grows low, hangs the head downwards, and hides itself with his own leaves, and were it not that the fragrant smell of his many virtues discover him to the world, he would choose to live and die in his self contenting secrecy. they would be less bitter, froward, and sour; and they would be more gentle, meek, and sweet in their spirits and practices. Humility will make a man have high thoughts of others, and low thoughts of a man's self; it will make a man see much glory and excellency in others, and much baseness and sinfulness in a man's self; it will make a man see others rich, and himself poor; others strong, and himself weak; others wise, and himself foolish. Humility will make a man excellent at covering others infirmities, and at recording their gracious services, and at delighting in the●● graces; it makes a man joy in every light that outshines his own, and in every wind that blows others good; Humility is better at believing, then 'tis at questioning other men's happiness. I judge, saith an humble soul, 'tis well with these Christians now, but it will be far better with them hereafter; they are now upon the borders of the new jerusalem, and 'twill be but as a day before they slide into jerusalem. An humble soul is willinger to say, Heaven is that man's, than mine, and Christ is that Christians, than mine, and God is their God in Covenant, then mine; ah! were Christians more humble, there would be less fire, and more love among them then now is, etc. Lastly, as Satan hath his Devices Last Device. to destroy gracious souls, so he hath his devices to destroy poor ignorant souls, and that sometimes BY drawing them to affect ignorance, and to neglect, slight, and Hos 4. 6. Prov. 22. 29. despise the means of knowledge; ignorance is the mother of mistake, the of trouble, error, and of terror Mat. 22. 29. 'tis the high way to hell, and it makes a man both a prisoner and a slave to the Devil at once. Ignorance unmans a Ignorants have this advantage (ut mitius ardeant) they have a cooler hell. man, it makes a man a beast, yea, it makes him more miserable than the beast that perisheth; there are none so easily, nor so frequently taken in Satan's snare, as ignorant souls; they are easily drawn to dance with the Devil all day, and to dream of supping with Christ at night, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that an ignorant heart is an evil heart; without knowledge, the mind is not good. Prov. 19 2. As an ignorant heart is a naughty heart, 'tis a heart in the dark, and no Ign●●at sane improbus omnis, saith Ariris●otle. M●●. 6. 22. good can come into a dark heart, but it must pass through the understanding; and if the eye be dark, all the body is dark. A leprous head, and a leprous heart are inseparable companions; ignorant hearts are so evil, that they let fly on all hands, and spare not to spit their venone in the very face of God, as Pharaoh did, when thick darkness was upon him. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is to consider, that ignorance is the deformity of the soul; As blindness is the deformity of the face, so is ignorance the deformity of the soul; as the want of fleshly eyes spoils the beauty of the face, so the want of spiritual eyes spoils the beauty of the soul. A man without knowledge, is as a workman without his hands, as a painter without his eyes, as a traveller without his legs, or as a ship without sails, or a bird without Wings, or like a body without a soul. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that ignorance makes men the objects of God's hatred and wrath. It is a people Heb. 3. 10, 11. They must needs e●re that know not Gods ways, yet cannot they wander so wide as to miss of hell. Isa. 27. 11. 2 Thes. 1. 8. that do err in their hearts, and have not known my ways; Wherefore I swore in my wrath, they should never enter into my rest. My people are a people of no understanding, therefore he that made them, will have no mercy on them Christ hath said, that he will come in flaming fire to render vengeance on them that know not God. Ignorance will end in vengeance: When you see a poor blind man here, you do not loathe him, nor hate him, but you pity him; oh! but soul-blindness makes you abominable in the sight of God; God hath sworn that ignorant persons shall never come into Heaven, Heaven Hos. 4. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cut off. Rome saith Ignorance, is the mother of devotion; but the Scripture faith, 'tis the mother of destruction. 4 Remedy. itself would be a hell to ignorant souls. My people are destroyed for want of knowledge; because thou hast rejected knowledge, I will reject thee. Chilo one of the seven Sages, being asked what God had done, answered, he exalted humble men, and suppressed proud, ignorant fools. The fourth Remedy against this device of Satan, is, to consider, that ignorance is a sin that leads to all sins. All sins are seminally in ignorance: You do Mat. 22. 29. err, not knowing the Scriptures; It puts men upon hating and persecuting the Saints. They shall hate you, and put you john 16. 2, 3. out of the Synagogues, yea, the time cometh, that whosoever killeth you, will think that Aristotle makes ignorance the mother of all the misrule in the world. 1 Tim. 1. 13. he doth God service. And these things will they do unto you, because they have not known the Father nor me. Paul thanks his ignorance for all his cruelties to Christians. I was a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious, but I obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly; 'twas ignorance that put the Jews upon crucifying Christ; Either forgive them, saith Christ of his murderers, for they know 1 Co●. 2. 8. not what they do; for if the Princes of this world had known, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory. Sin at the first was the cause of ignorance, but now ignorance is the cause of all sin: swearing, They did like Oedipus, who killed his father Laius, K. of Thebes, and thought he killed his enemy. and lying, and killing, and stealing & whoring abound, saith the Prophet, because there is no knowledge of God in the Land. There are none so frequent, and so impudent in the ways of sin, as ignorant souls; they care not, nor mind not what they do, nor what they say against God, Christ, Heaven, holiness, and their own souls. Our tongues Hosea 4. 1, 2. Psal. 73. 8, 9 are our own, who shall control us? They are corrupt, and speak wickedly, concerning oppression, they speak loftily. They set their mouth against the Heavens, and their tongue walketh through the earth. Have all the Psal. 14. 4. workers of iniquity no knowledge? who eat up my people as they eat bread, and call not upon the Lord. And now to prevent Objections, I shall lay down some Propositions, or Conclusions concerning Satan and his Devices, and then give you the Reasons of the Point, and so come to make some Use and Application of the whole to ourselves. The first Proposition or Conclusion I shall lay down is this. THat though Satan hath his Devices 1 Proposition. to draw souls to sin, yet we must be careful, that we do not lay all our temptations upon Satan, that we do not wrong the Devil, and father that upon him, that is to be fathered upon our own base hearts; I think that oftentimes men charge that upon the Devil, that is to be charged upon their own hearts. And the Lord said unto the Gen. 3. 13. woman, What is this that thou hast done? and the woman said, the Serpent beguiled me, and I did eat. Sin and shifting came into the world together. This is no small baseness of our hearts, that they will be naught, I very naught, and yet will father that naughtiness upon Satan. Man hath an evil root within him; that were there no Devil to tempt him, nor no wicked men in the world to entice him, yet that root of bitterness, that cursed sinful nature that is in him, would draw him to sin, though he knows before hand, that the wages of sin is eternal death. For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, Rom. 6. ult. Mat. 5. 19 fornications, thefts, false witnesses, blasphemies. The whole frame of man is Cum primum nascimur in omnt continuo pravitate versamur; we are no sooner borne then buried in a bog of wickedness, Tully. out of frame, the understanding is dark; the will cross, the memory slippery, the affections crooked, the conscience corrupted, the tongue poisoned, and the heart wholly evil, only evil, and continually evil. Should God chain up Satan, and give him no liberty to tempt, or entice the sons of men to vanity, and folly; yet they would not, yet they could not but sin against him, by reason of that cursed nature that is in them, that will still be a provoking jude 15, 16. them to those sins, that will provoke and stir up the anger and wrath of God against them. Satan hath only a persuading sleight, not an enforcing might; he may tempt us, but without ourselves, he cannot conquer us; he james 1. 4. may entice us, but without ourselves, he cannot hurt us; our hearts carries the greatest stroke in every sin. Satan 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The fire is our wood, though it be the Devil's flame, Nazianzen. can never undo a man without himself, but a man may easily undo himself without Satan. Satan can only present the golden cup, but he hath no power to force us to drink the poison that is in the cup; he can only present to us the glory of the world, he cannot force us to fall down and worship him, to enjoy the world, he can only spread his snares; he hath no power to force us to walk in the mided of his snares; therefore do the Devil so much right, as not to excuse yourselves, by your accusing him, and laying that load upon him, that you should lay upon your own hearts. The second Proposition is this. 2 Proposition. That Satan hath a great hand, and stroke in most sins. 'Twas Satan that Gen. 3. 1. 4, 5. tempted our first Parents to Rebellion. 'Twas Satan that provoked David to 1 Chron. 21. 1. number the people. 'Twas Satan that put Peter upon rebuking Christ; therefore saith Christ, Get thee behind me, Satan. Mat. 16. 22, 23. 'Twas Satan that put Cain upon murdering of righteous Abel: therefore 'tis that he is called a murderer from john 8. 44. the beginning. 'Twas Satan that put treason into the heart of Judas, against Christ. And supper being ended, the Devil john 13. 2. having put it into the heart of judas Iscatiot, Simons son, to betray him. 'Twas Satan that pu● Ananias upon lying: Peter said, Acts 5. 3. Ananias, why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the holy Ghost? As the hand of joab was in the tale of the woman of Tekoah, so Satan's hand is usually in all the sins that men commit; such is Satan's malice against God, and his envy Diaholus tendat deus orobat. Tertul. against man, that he will have a hand one way or another in all their fins, though ke knows that all the sins that he provokes others to, shall be charged upon him to his greater woe, and eternal torment. Ambrose brings in the Devil boasting against Christ, and challenging Judas as his own; he is not thine Lord Jesus, he is mine; his thoughts beat for me; he eats with thee, but is fed by me; he takes bread from thee, but money from me; he drinks wine with thee, and sells thy blood to me; such is his malice against Christ, and his wrath and rage against man, that he will take all advantages to draw men to that, that may give him advantage to triumph over Christ, and men's souls for ever. The third Proposition is this. That Satan must have a double leave, 3 Proposition. before he can do any thing against us; he must have leave from God, and leave from ourselves, before he can act any thing against our happiness; he must have his commission from God, as you may see in the example of job; though job 1. 11, 12. Chap. 2 v 3, 4, 5. the Devil had malice enough to destroy him, yet he had not so much as power to touch him, till God gave him a Commission. They could not so much as enter into Luke 8. 32. the swine without leave from Christ; Satan would feign have combated with Peter; but this could not he do without leave; Satan hath desired to have you, Luke 22. 13. to winnow you: So Satan could never have overthrown Ahab and Saul, but by 1 Kings 22. a commission from God; Ah! what a cordial, what a comfort should this be to the Saints, that their greatest, subtlest, and watchfullest enemy cannot hurt, nor harm them without leave from him, who is their sweetest Saviour, their dearest husband, and their choicest friend. And as Satan must have leave from Adversaria po●e 〈…〉 non habet vim c●gendi, sed persuadendi Is●do●e. God, so he must have leave of us: when he tempts, we must assent; when he makes offers, we must hearken; when he commands, we must obey, or else all his labour and temptations will be frustrate; and the evil that he tempts us to, shall be put down only to his account; that's a remarkable passage of the Apostle in Acts 5. 3. Why hath Satan Acts 5. 3. filled thy heart to lie to the holy Ghost? etc. He doth not expostulate the matter with Satan, he doth not say, Satan, why They are the wor●●, and grossest liars, who pretend Religion, and the Spirit, and yet are acted only by carnal principles to carnal ends. host thou filled Ananias heart to make him lie to the holy Ghost? but he expostulates the case with Ananias; Peter said, Ananias, why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the holy Ghost? Why hast thou given him an advantage to fill thy heart with infidelity, hypocrisy, and obstinate audacity, to lie to the holy Ghost? as If he had said, Satan could never have done this in thee (which will now for ever undo thee) unless thou hadst first given him leave. If when a temptation comes, a man cries out, and saith; ah Lord! here is a temptation that would force me, that would deflower my soul, and I have no strength to withstand it; oh! help, help, for thy honour's sake, for thy Son's sake, for thy promise sake, 'tis a sign that Satan hath not gained your consent, but committed a rape upon your souls, which he shall dearly pay for. The fourth Proposition is this. That no weapons, but spiritual 4 Proposition. weapons will be useful and serviceable to the soul in fight, and combating with the Devil; this the Apostle shows, Wherhfore take unto you (saith Ephes. 6. 13. he) the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand. So the same Apostle tells you, that the weapons of your warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God, to 2 Cor. 10. 4. the casting down of strong bolds; you have not to do with a weak, but with a mighty We read of many that out of greatness of spirit could offer violence to nature, but were at a loss when they come to deal with a corruption, or a temptation. enemy; and therefore you had need look to it, that your weapons are mighty, and that they cannot be, unless they are spiritual; carnal weapons have no might, nor spirit in them towards the making of a conquest upon Satan. 'Twas not David's sling, nor stone that gave him the honour, & advantage of setting his feet upon Goliath, but his faith in the name of the Lord of Hosts. Thou comest 1 Sam. 17. 45. to me with a sword, with a spear, and with a shield: but I am come to thee in the name of the Lord of Hosts, the God of the Armies of Israel, whom thou hast defied. He that Heraclius his Motto was (a Deo victoria) it is God that gives victories, and that should be every Christians Motto.) fights against Satan, in the strength of his own resolutions, constitution, or education, will certainly fly and fall before him; Satan will be too hard for such a soul, and lead him captive at his pleasure. The only way to stand, conquer, and triumph, is still to plead, 'tis written, as Christ did. There is no sword, but the two-edged sword of the Mat. 4. 10. Spirit; that will be found to be mettle of proof, when a soul comes to engage against Satan: Therefore when you are tempted to uncleanness, plead, 'tis written, Be ye holy as I am holy. And 1 Pet. 15. 16● 2 Cor. 5. 7. Chap. 1. l●t us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the ●eare of the Lord. If he tempts● you to distrust God's providence, and fatherly care of you, plead, 'tis written, They Psal. 34. 9 that fear the Lord shall want nothing that is good. 'Tis written, The Lord will give Psal. 84. 11. grace and glory, and no good thing will he withhold from them that purlely live. If he tempt you to fear, that you shall faint, and fall, and never be able to run to the end of the race that is set before job 17. 9 you, plead, 'tis written, The righteous shall hold on his way, and he that hath clean hands shall be stronger, and stronger. 'Tis written, I will make an everlasting covevenant with them, that I will not turn away jer. 32. 40. from them, to do them good, but I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not departed from me. 'Tis written, They that wait upon the Lord, they shall renew their Isa. 40. 31. strength: they shall mount up with wings as Eagles, they shall run, and not be weary, and they shall walk, and not ●aint. If Satan tempt you to think, that because your sun for the present is set in a cloud, that therefore 'twill rise no more, and that the face of God will shine no more upon you? that your best days are now at an end, and that you must spend all your time in sorrow, and sighing? plead, 'tis written, He will turn again, he Mica. 7. 19 will have compassion upon us, and cast all our sins into the depths of the sea. 'Tis written, For a small moment have I forsaken Isa. 54. 7. thee, but with great mercies will I gather Verse 8. thee. In a little wrath I hide my face from thee for a moment, but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer. 'Tis written, The mountains shall departed, and the hills be Verse 10. removed, but my kindness shall not departed from thee, neither shall the Covenant of my peace be removed, saith the Lord, that hath mercy on thee. 'Tis written, Can a woman Isa. 49. 15. forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? yea, they may forget, yet will not I forget thee. Behold, I have graven thee upon the Verse 16. palms of my bands, thy walls are continually before me. If ever you would be too hard for Satan, and after all your assaults have your bow abide in strength, then take to you the word of God, which is the two-edged sword of the Spirit, Ephes. 6. 1. and the shield of faith, whereby you shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the Devil. 'Tis not spitting at Satan's name, nor crossing yourselves, nor leaning to your own resolutions, that will get you the victory. Luther reports of Staupicius a Germane Minister, that he acknowledged himself, that before he came to understand aright the free and powerful grace of God, that he vowed, and resolved an hundred times against some particular sin, and never could get power over it; at last he saw the reason, to be his trusting to his own resolution; therefore be skilful in the word of righteousness, and in the actings of faith upon Christ, and his victory, and that Crown of glory that is set before you, and Satan will certainly fly from you, james 4. 7. etc. The fifth Proposition is this. That we may read much of Satan's 5 Proposition. nature, and disposition, by the divers names and Epithets, that are given him in the Scriptures. Sometimes he is called Behemoth, which is bruta, whereby job 40. 15. the greatness, and brutishness of the Devil is figured. Those evil spirits are sometimes called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Accusers, for their calumnies and slanders; and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 evil ones for their malice: Satan is Adversarius, an adversary that troubleth Revel 9 and molesteth: Abaddon is a destroyer. They are called Tempter's for their suggestion, Lions for their devouring, Dragons for their cruelty, and Serpents for their subtlety, etc. As his names are, so is he; as face answers to face, so do Satan's names answer to his nature; he hath the worst names, and the worst nature of all created creatures, etc. The sixth and last Proposition is this. That God will shortly tread down 6 Proposition. Rom. 16. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suntripsei from suntribo, the Greek word signifies to break, or crush a thing to pieces, being applied to the feet; it noteth that breaking or crushing, which is by stamping upon a thing. Satan under the Saints feet. Christ our Champion hath already won the Field, and will shortly set our feet upon the necks of our spiritual enemies. Satan is a foiled Adversary, Christ hath led him captive, and triumphed over him upon the Cross. Christ hath already overcome him, and put weapons into your hands, that you may overcome him also, & set your feet upon his neck. Though Satan be a roaring Lion, yet Christ, who is the Lion of the Tribe of Judah will make Satan fly, and fall before you. Let Satan do his worst, yet you shall have the honour and the happiness to triumph over him. Cheer up, you precious sons of Zion, for the certainty and sweetness of Victory will abundantly recompense you, for all the pains you have taken, in making resistance against Satan's temptations. The broken horns of Satan shall be Trumpets of our triumph, and the Cornets of our joy, etc. Now I shall come to the Reasons of the Point, and so draw to a close, etc. THe first Reason is, that their hearts 1 Reason. may be kept in an humble, praying, The Philosopher had a ball of brass in his hand, which if he chanced to sleep with, the fall into a basin awaked him to his studies; You are wise: and know how to apply it. watching frame; oh! hath Satan so many devices to ensnare, and undo the souls of men? how should this awaken dull, drowsy souls, and make them stand upon their watch? A Saint should be like a Seraphim, beset all over with eyes and lights, that he may avoid Satan's snares, and stand fast in the hour of temptation. The Lord hath in the Scripture discovered the several snares, plots, and devices that the Delill hath to undo the souls of men, that so being forwarn'd, they may be forearmed, that they may be always upon their watchtower, and hold their weapons in their hands, as the jews did in N●hemiah's time, etc. The second Reason is, from that malice, 2 Reason. envy, and enmity that is in Satan, Malice cares not what it saith, or doth, it may kill or gall. against the souls of men; Satan is full of envy and enmity, & that makes him very studious, to suit his snares and plots to the tempers, constitutions, fancies, and callings of men, that so he may make them as miserable as himself. The Russians are so malicious, that you shall have a man hid some of his own goods in the house of him, whom he hateth, and then accuse him for the stealth of them: so doth Satan out of malice to An envious heart and a plotting head are inseparable companions. the souls of men, hid his goods, his wares, as I may say, in the souls of men, and then go, and accuse them before the Lord, and a thousand, thousand other ways Satan's malice, envy, and enmity puts him upon, eternally to undo the precious souls of men, etc. The third Reason is drawn from that 3 Reason. long experience that Satan hath had, he is a spirit of mighty abilities, and his abilities to lay snares before us, are mightily increased by that long standing of his; he is a spirit of above five thousand years standing; he hath had time enough to study all those ways, and methods, which tend most to ensnare, and undo the souls of men: And as he hath time enough, so he hath made it his whole study, his only study, his constant study to find out snares, depths and stratagems, to entangle, and overthrow the souls of men; when he was but a young Serpent, he did easily deceive, and out-wit our first Parents, but now he is grown that Old Serpent, as Gen. 3. John speaks, He is as old as the world, Revel. 12. 9 and is grown very cunning by experience. The fourth Reason is, in Judgement 4 Reason. to the men of the world, that they may stumble, and fall, and be ensnared for ever; wicked men that withstand the offers of mercy, and despise the spirit of grace; that will not open, though God knocks never so hard by his word, and rod; by his Spirit, and consceience, are given up by a hand of Justice, to be 1 King. 22. 22. hardened, deceived, and ensnared by Satan to their everlasting ruin; and what can be more just, then that they should be taken, and charmed with Satan's wiles, who have frequently refused to be charmed by the Spirit of grace, though he hath charmed never so wisely, and never so sweetly, etc. The fifth Reason is, That the excellency, 5 Reason. and power of God's grace may be the more illustrated, and manifested, by making man able to grapple with this mighty Adversary, and that notwithstanding all the plots, devices, and stratagems of Satan; yet he will make them victorious here, and crown them with glory hereafter; the greater, and the subtler the enemies of the children of Israel were, the more did divine power, wisdom, and goodness sparkle, and shine; that notwithstanding, all their power, plots, and stratagems, etc. yet to Canan he would bring them at last. When Paul had well weighed this, he sits down, and glories in his infirmities, 2 Cor. 12. 7, 8, 9 and distresses, and Satan's buffet, that the power of Christ might rest upon him. The use of the Point. IF Satan hath such a world of devices, Use. and stratagems to ensnare, and undo the souls of men, than instead of wondering that so few are saved, set down, and wonder that any are saved, that any escape the snares of this cunning fowler, who spreads his nets, and casts forth his baits in all places, and in all cases and companies, etc. But this is not the main thing that I intent to speak to; my main business shall be, to set before you some special Rules, and helps against all his Devices, and the first is this. If you would not be taken by any of Satan's Devices, then walk by rule; he that walks by rule, walks most safely, Prov. 12. 28. Gal. 6. 16. Prov. 15. 24. he that walks by rule, walks most honourably; he that walk by rule, walks most sweetly; when men throw off the word, than God throws off them, and then Satan takes them by the hand, and leads them into snares at his pleasure; he that thinks himself too good to be ruled by the word, will be found too bad to be owned by God; and if God do not, nor will not own him, Satan will by his stratagems overthrow him. Them that keep to the rule, they shall be kept in the hour of temptation. Because Revel. 10. 3. thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth. 2. As you would not be taken with any of Satan's devices, take heed of vexing, Spiritus Sanctus est res delicata, the divine spirit is a very tender thing; if you grieve him, he will certainly grieve and vex your precious souls. Lam. 1. 16. & grieving the holy Spirit of God; 'tis the Spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ that is best able to discover Satan's snar'e unto us; 'tis only he that can point out all his plots, and discover all his methods, and enable men to escape those pits that he hath digged for their precious souls; Ah souls! if you set that sweet and blessed spirit a mourning, that alone can secure you from Satan's depths by whom will you be secured? man is a weak creature, and no way able to discover Satan's snares, nor to avoid them, unless the spirit of the Lord gives skill & power; therefore who ever be grieved, be sure the spirit be not grieved by your enormities, nor by your refusing Isa 63. 10. Psal. 73. 2, 3. the cordials, and comforts that he sets before you; nor by slighting, and despising his gracious actings in others, 1 Thes. 5. 19 Acts 2. 13. nor by calling sincerity, hypocrisy; faith, fancy, etc. nor by fathering those things upon the spirit, that are the brats, and fruits of your own hearts. The spirit of the Lord is your counsellor, your comforter, your upholder, your strengthner. 'Tis only the spirit that makes a man too great for Satan to conquer. Greater is he that is in you, 1 John 4. 4. than he that is in the world. Thirdly, if you would not be taken with any of Satan's devices, then labour for more heavenly wisdom: Ah souls! If men could but see the fair face of wisdom with morta●l eyes, they would be in love with her, saith Pla●●. you are much in the dark, you have but a little to that others have, and to that you might have had, had you not been wanting to yourselves. There are many knowing souls, but there are but a few wise souls; there is oftentimes a great deal of knowledge, where there is but a little wisdom to improve that knowledge; knowledge without wisdom Sine prudentia simplicitas stul●●tia est, Dru●ius. is like mettle in a blind horse, which is often an occasion of the Rider's fall, and of his bones being justled against the walls. 'Tis not the most knowing Christian, but the most wise Christian, that sees, avoids, and escapes Satan's snares. The way of life is above to Prov. 15. 24. the wise (saith Solomon) that he may departed from hell beneath. Heavenly wisdom makes a man delight to fly high; and the higher any man flies, the more he is out of the reach of Satan's snares; Ah souls! you had need of a great deal Malim prudentiae guttam quam foecandioris fortunae pelagas, said Nazianzen. A Serpent's eye is a singular ornament in a doves head. of heavenly wisdom, to see where, and how Satan lays his baits, and snares; and wisdom to find out proper Remedies against his Devices, and wisdom to apply those Remedies seasonably, inwardly, and effectually to your own hearts, that so you may avoid the snares which that evil one hath laid for your precious souls. 4. If you would not be taken with any of Satan's devices, then make present resistance against Satan's first motions; 'tis safe to resist, 'tis dangerous to dispute; Eve disputes, and falls in Paradise; Gen. 3. Job resi●te, and conquers upon the dunghill. He that will play with Satan's bait, will quickly be taken with Satan's hook. The promise of conquest is made over to resisting, not to disputing; Resist the Devil, and he shall file jam. 4. 7. from you. Ah souls! were you better at resisting, then at disputing (though happily you are not very expert at either) your temptations would be fewer, and your strength to stand would be greater than now it is, etc. Fifthly, if you would not be taken with any of Satan's Devices, then labour to be filled with the spirit; the spirit of the Lord is a spirit of light and power, and what can a soul do without light, & power against spiritual wickednesses Ephes. 6. 12. in high places. 'Tis not enough that you have the spirit, but you must be filled with the spirit, or else (Satan) that evil spirit will be too hard for you, and his plots will prosper against you. That's a sweet word of the Apostle, Ephes. 5. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. To be filled with the spirit, as the sails of a ship is filled with wind. Luther saith, a ho●y gluttony is to lay on, to seed hard, and to fetch hearty draughts, till they be even drunk with loves, & with the abundance of the Spirit; & oh! that there were more of such holy gluttony in the world. be filled with the Spirit, i. e. labour for abundance of the spirit; he that thinks he hath enough of the holy Spirit, will quickly find himself vanquished by the evil spirit. Satan hath his snares to take you in prosperity & adversity, in health & sickness, in strength and weakness; when you are alone, and when you are in company; when you come on to spiritual duties, and when you come off from spiritual duties, and if you are not filled with the Spirit, Satan will be too hard, and too crafty for you, and will easily, and frequently take you in his snares, and make a prey of you in spite of your souls; therefore labour more to have your hearts filled with the Spirit, then to have your heads filled with notions, your shops with wares, your chests with silver, or your bags with gold, so shall you escape the snares of this fowler, and triumph over all his plots, etc. Sixtly, if you would not be taken in any of Satan's snares, then keep humble; 'Tis reported of Satan, that he should s●y thus of a learned man (tu me semper vincis) chou do●t always overcome me; when I would exalt, & promote thee, thou keepest thyself in humility; and when I would throw thee dawn, thou liftest up thyself in assurance of faith. An humble heart will rather lie in the dust, then rise by wickedness; and sooner part with all, than the peace of a good conscience. Humility keeps the soul free from many darts of Satan's casting, and snares of his spreading; as the low shrubs are free from many violent gusts, and blasts of wind, which shake and rend the taller trees. The Devil hath least power to fasten a temptation on him, that is most humble; he that hath a gracious measure of humility, is neither affected with Satan's proffers, nor terrified with his threaten. I have read of one, who seeing in a vision many snares of the Devil spread upon the earth, he sat down, & mourned, and said in himself (Q●is pertransiet ista) who shall pass through these? whereunto he heard a voice answering (humilitas pertransiet) humility shall; God hath said, that he will teach the humble, Psal. 25. 9 Isa. 57 15. James 4. 6. and that he will dwell with the humble, and that he will fill and satisfy the humble; And if the teachings of God, the in-dwellings of God, if the pourings in of God will not keep the soul from falling into Satan's snares, I do not know what will: And therefore as you would be happy in resisting Satan, and blessed in triumphing over Satan, and all his snares keep humble, I say again, keep humble, etc. 7. If you would not be taken in any of Satan's snares, then keep a strong, close, and constant watch; a secure 1 Thes. 5 6. We must not be like Agrippa's dormouse, that would 〈◊〉 awake, till cast into boiling lead▪ but effectually mind these following Scriptures, wherein this duty of watchfulness 〈◊〉 strictly enjoined. soul is already an ensnared soul: That soul that will not watch against temptations, will certainly fall before the power of temptations; Satan works most strongly on the fancy, when the soul is drowsy. The soul's security is Satan's opportunity to fall upon the soul, and to spoil the soul, as Joshua did the men of Ai. The best way to be safe and secure from all Satan's assaults, is with Nehemiah, and the jews, to watch and pray, and pray, and watch; by this means they became too hard for their enemies, and the work of the Lord did prosper sweetly in their hands. Remember how Christ chid his sluggish Disciples, what, could you not watch with Mat. 24. 42. Chap. 26. 41. Mar. 1●. 33, 34, 35. 37▪ Luke 21. 36. me one hour? what, cannot you watch with me? how will you then die with me? If you cannot endure words, how will you endure wounds, etc. Satan always keeps a crafty, and malicious watch, seeking whom he may devour (katapie) or 1 Cor. 16. 13. whom he may drink, or sip up, as the Coloss. 4. 2. Apostle speaks in that 1 Pet. 5. 8. Satan 1 Pet. 4. 7. Revel. 3. 3. is very envious at our condition, that we should enjoy that Paradise out of which he is cast, and out of which he shall be for ever kept. Shall Satan keep a crafty watch, and Hannibal never rested whether he did conquer, or was conquered. 'Tis so with Satan, Learn for shame of the Devil, said blessed Latimer, to watch, seeing the Devil is so watchful. shall not Christians keep a holy spiritual watch? our whole life is beset with temptations, Satan watches all opportunities to break our peace, to wound our consciences, to lessen our comforts, to impair our graces, to slur our evidences, and to damp our assurances, etc. Oh! what need then have we to be always upon our Watch-Tower, lest we be surprised by this subtle Serpent. Watchfulness includes a waking, a rousing up of the soul; 'Tis a continual, careful observing of our hearts and ways, in all the turn of our lives, that we still keep close to God, and his word. Watchfulness is nothing else but the soul running up and down, too and fro, busy every where; it is the heart busied, and employed with diligent observation of (Quid inde) what comes from within us, and of (Quid unde) what comes from without us, and into us. Ah souls! you are no longer safe and secure, then when you are upon your watch; while Antipater kept the watch, Alexander was safe, and while we keep a st●●ct watch, we are safe; a watchful soul is a soul upon the wing, a soul out of gunshot, a soul upon a rock, a soul in a Castle, a soul above the clouds, a soul held fast in everlasting arms. I shall conclude this 7th head with this advice: Remember the Dragon is subtle, and bites the Elephant's ear, and then sucks his blood, because he knows that to be the only place which the Elephant cannot reach with his trunk to defend; so our enemies are so subtle, that they will by't us, and strike us, where they may most mischief us, and therefore it doth very much concern us to stand always upon our guard. Eightly, if you would not be taken with any of Satan's snares, and devices, then keep up your communion with God; your strength to stand, and withstand 2 Cor. 6. 16. The words are very significant in the original, there are two in's, as if God could never have near enough communion with them. Satan's fiery darts, is from your communion with God; a soul high in communion with God may be tempted, but will not easily be conquered, such a soul will fight it out to the death; Communion with God furnisheth the soul with the greatest, and the choicest arguments to withstand Satan's temptations; Communion is the result of union; communion is a reciprocal exchange between Christ, and a gracious soul; Communion is jacob's ladder, where you have Christ sweetly coming down into the soul, and the soul by divine influences sweetly ascending up to Christ. Communion with Christ is very inflaming, raising, and strengthening; while Samson kept up his communion The sea ebbs and flows, the Moon increases, and decreases, so 'tis with Saints in their communion with God. with God, no enemy could stand before him, but he goes on conquering, and to conquer; but when he was fallen in his communion with God, he quickly falls before the plots of his enemies; 'twil be so with your souls, so long as your communion with God is kept up, you will be too hard for spiritual wickednesses in high places; but if you fall from your Plutarch tells of Eudoxus, that he would be willing to be burnt up presently by the Sun, so he might be admitted to come so near it, as to learn the nature of it; what should not we be content to suffer for the keeping up of commuion with Christ? communion with God, you will fall as others before the face of every temptation. David, so long as he kept up his communion with God, he stands, and triumphs over all his enemies; but when he was fallen in his communion with God, than he falls before the enemies, that were in his own bosom, & flies before those that pursued after his life; 'Twil be so with your souls, if you do not keep up your communion with God. job keeps up his communion with God, and conquers Satan upon the dunghill. Adam loses his communion with God, and is conquered by Satan in Paradise. Communion with God is a shield upon land, as well as an anchor at sea; 'tis a sword to defend you, as well as a staff to support you; therefore keep up your communion. 9 If you would not be taken in any of Satan's snares, then engage not against Satan in your own strength, but That is a remarkable saying of Moses, Exod. 15. God is fortitudo mea, and Laus mea, and salus mea, my strength, and my praise, and my salvation, all in the abstract. be every day drawing new virtue, and strength from the Lord Jesus; certainly, that soul that engages against any old or new temptation, without new strength, new influences from on high, will fall before the power of the temptation; you may see this in Peter, he rested upon some old received strength (Though all men should deny thee, yet will not I) and therefore he falls sadly before a new temptation; he curses, and Mat. 26. swears, and denies him thrice, that had thrice appeared gloriously to him; ah souls! when the snare is spread, look up to Jesus Christ, who is lifted up in the Gospel, as the brazen Serpent was 'Tis but look up, and live, look unto me and be saved from the ends of the earth, 〈◊〉 45. 2●. in the wilderness, and say to him, Dear Lord, here is a new snare laid to catch my soul, and grace formerly received without fresh supplies from thy blessed bosom, will not deliver me from this snare; oh! give me new strength, new power, new influences, new measures of grace, that so I may escape this snare. Ah souls! remember this, that your John 15. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is seorsim a me separat, from me, or apart from me, ye can do nothing. strength to stand, and overcome, must not be expected from graces received, but from the fresh, and renewed influences of Heaven; you must lean more upon Christ then upon your duties, you must lean more upon Christ, then upon spiritual taft● and discoveries; you must lean more upon Christ, then upon your graces, or else Satan will lead you into captivity, etc. Tenthly, and lastly, If you would not be taken in any of Satan's snares, then be much in prayer; prayer is a shelter to the soul, a sacrifice to God, and a scourge to the Devil; David's heart was oft more out of tune, than his Harp; he prays, and then, in spite Of Carolus Magnus it was spoken, Carolus plus cum Deo quam cum hominibus loquitur, that he spoke more with God then with men; ah! that I could say so of the Christians in our days. of the Devil, cries, return unto thy rest oh my soul. Prayer is (Porta coeli, clavis Paradisi) the gate of Heaven, a key to let us into Paradise; there is nothing that renders plots fruitless like prayer, therefore saith Christ, watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation; you must watch and pray, and pray, and watch, if you would not enter into temptation. When Sennacherib and Haman had laid plots and snares to have destroyed the Jews, they prayed, and their souls were delivered, & Sennacherib and H●man destroyed. David had many snares laid for him, and this put● him upon prayer; Keep me (saith he) from the snare which they have laid for me, Psal. 141. 9, 10. and the grins of the workers of iniquity. Let the wicked fall into their own nets, whilst that I escape. The proud saith he, hath hid a snare for me, and cords, they have spread a net by the way side, they have set grins Psal. 140. 5, 6. for me, Selab. I said unto the Lord, thou art my God, hear the voice of my supplication Nunquam abs te, absque te recedo, Bern. Oh Lord, saith he, I never go away from thee, without thee. oh Lord. Saul and many others had laid snares for David, and this puts him upon prayer, and so the snares are broken, and he is d●lived; ah souls! take words to yourselves, and tell God that Satan hath spread his snares in all places, and in all companies; tell God that he digs deep, and that he hath plot upon plot, and device upon device, and all to Let us saith Basil, with a holy impudence, make God ashamed that he cannot look us in the face, if he do deny our importunity, Jacob like, I will not let thee go, unless thou bless me. undo you; tell God, that you have neither skill, nor power to escape his snares; tell God, that 'tis a work too high, and too hard for any created creature to work your deliverance, unless he puts under his own everlasting arms; tell God how his honour is engaged to stand by you, and to bring you off, that you be not ruined by his plots; tell God how the wicked would triumph, if you should fall into Satan's snares; tell God of the love of Christ, of the blood of Christ, and of the intercession of Christ for you, that away may be found for your escape; tell God, if he will make it his honour to save you from falling into Satan's snares, you will make it your glory to speak of his goodness, and to live out his kindness. Christian's must do a● Ded●lus, that when he could not escape by a way upon earth, went by a way of heaven, and that is, the way of prayer, which is the only way left to escape Satan's snares, etc. The next Use is a use of thankfulness, Use. to those that escape Satan's snares, that are not taken by him at his will; ah Christians! it stands you upon with that Princely Prophet David, to call upon your souls, and say, Bless the Psal. 103. 1, 2. Lord oh our souls, and all that is within us, bless his holy name; Bless the Lord oh our souls, and forget not all his benefits; who hath not given us to be a prey to Satan, and to be ensnared by those snares that he hath laid for our souls; the sense of this great favour did work up David's heart to praises; Blessed be the Lord (saith Psalm 144. 6, 7. he) who hath not given us as a prey to their teeth, our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snares of the Fowlers, the snare is broken, and we are escaped: Ah Christians! Remember, that the greatest part of the world, yea, the greatest part of Professors are taken in Satan's snares; can you think seriously of this, and not The Ancients use to say, ingratum dixeris omnia dixeris, say a man is unthankful, and say he is any thing. blush to be unthankful; what are you better than others? and what have you deserved of God, or done for God more than other●? that you should by the help of a Divine hand escape the snares, when others are taken, and held in the snares of the Devil, to their eternal Psal. 71. 14. I will yet praise thee more & more; in the Original 'tis▪ I will add to thy praise. overthrow, etc. Will you be thankful for the escaping the snares that men spread for your lives, or estates, & c? and will you not be much more thankful for escaping those snares that Satan hath laid for your precious souls? Remember this, that deliverance The Stork is said to leave one of her young ones where she hatcheth them; and the Elephant to turn up the first sprig toward Heaven, when he cometh to feed, out of some instinct of gratitude; ah souls! that these may not bear witness against you in the day of Christ. from Satan's snares doth carry with it the clearest, and the greatest evidence of the soul and heart of God to be towards you. Many a man by a common hand of Providence escapes many a snare that man hath laid for him, but yet escapes not the snares that Satan hath laid for him. Saul, and judas, and Demas, doubtless escaped many snares, that men had laid for them, but none of them escaped the snares that the Devil had laid for them. Many men are lifted up above the snares of men, by a common hand of providence, that are left to fall into the snares of the Devil, by a hand of Justice; your deliverance from Satan's snares is a fruit of special love; can you thus look upon it, and not be thankful, oh precious souls? I judge not. The last use of this point is to bespeak Use. Christians to long to be at home; oh! long to be in the bosom of Christ, long to be in the Land of Canaan; for Austin wished that he might have seen 3. things, Rome flourishing, Paul preaching, & Christ conversing with men upon the earth. Bede comes after, & correcting this last wish, faith, yea, but let me see the King in his beauty, Christ in his heavenly Kingdom. this world, this wilderness is full of snares, and all employments are full of snares, and all enjoyments are full of snares; in civil things, Satan hath his snares to entrapus; and in all spiritual things, Satan hath his snares to catch us. All places are full of snares, City and Country, shop, and closet, Sea, and Land, and all our mercies are surrounded with snares; there are snares about our tables, & snares about our beds, etc. yea, Satan is so powerful, and subtle, that he will oftentimes make our greatest, nearest, and dearest mercies to become our greatest snares; sometimes he will make the wife that lies in the bosom, to be a snare to a man, as sampson's was, and as Jobs was; sometimes he will make the child to be a snare, as Absolom was, and Elies sons were; and sometimes he will make the servant to be a snare, as Joseph was to his Mistress; ah souls! Satan is so cunning, and artificial, that he can turn your cups into snares, and your into snares, and your houses into snares, and your gardens into snares, & all your recreations into snares, etc. And oh! how should the consideration of these things work all your souls to say with the Church, Make hast my Cant. 8. ult. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berahh dodi flee away speedily my beloved. beloved, and be like to a Roe, or a young Hart upon the mountains of spices, and to love, and look, and long for the coming of Christ; shall the espoused Maid long for the marriage day? the servant for his freedom? the captive for his ransom? the Traveller for his Inn? the Phil. 1 23. 2 Cor. 5. 2. 4: Mariner for his Harbour? and shall not the people of the Lord long much more to be in the bosom of Christ? there being nothing below the bosom of Christ, that is not surrounded with Satan's snares. What Paul once spoke of bonds and Acts 20. 23. afflictions, that they attended him in every place; that may all the Saints say of Satan's snares, that they attend them in every place, which should cause them to cry out (migremus hinc, migr●mus hinc) let us go hence, let us go hence; and to say with Monica, Augustine's mother, * Quid hic faciemus? cur non ocyus migramus? cur non hinc avolamus? what do we here? why depart we not hence? why fly we no swifter? Ah souls! till you are taken up into the bosom of Christ, your comforts will not be full, pure, and constant till then; Satan will still be tempting you, and spreading snares to entangle you, therefore you should always be crying out with the Church, Come Lord Rev. 22. 20. It is as easy to compass the Heavens with a span, and contain the Sea in a nutshell, as to relate fully Christ's excellencies, or heaven's happiness. Jesus. Is not Christ that star of Jacob, that giveth light to them that are in darkness? that Prince of Peace, who brings the Olive-branch of Peace to souls that are perplexed? Is not the greatest worth and wealth in him? Is not all the petty excellencies and perfections of all created creatures epitomised in him? Is not he the Crown of Crowns, the glory of glories, and the Heaven of Heavens? Oh then! be still a longing after a full, clear, and constant enjoyment of Christ in Heaven; for till then, Satan will still have plots and designs upon you; he acts by an untired power, and will never let you rest, till you are taken up to an everlasting rest in the bosom of Christ. An Appendix touching five more several Devices that Satan hath to keep poor souls from believing in Christ, from receiving of Christ, from embracing of Christ, from resting, leaning, or relying upon Christ for everlasting happiness, and blessedness, according to the Gospel; and Remedies against those Devices. Now the first Device that Satan hath to keep the soul off from believing in Christ, from closing with Christ, etc. is, BY suggesting to the soul the 1 Device. greatness and vileness of his sins: what, saith Satan, dost thou think that thou shalt ever obtain mercy by Christ, that hast sinned with so high a hand against Christ? that hast slighted the tenders of grace? that hast grieved the spirit of grace? that hast despised the word of grace? that hast trampled under feet the blood of the Covenant, by which thou mightst have been pardoned, purged, justified, and saved? that hast spoken and done all the evil that thou couldst? No, no, saith Satan, he hath mercy for others, jerem. 3. 5. but not for thee; pardon for others, but not for thee; righteousness for others, but not for thee, etc. therefore 'tis in vain for thee to think of believing in Christ, or resting and leaning thy guilty soul upon Christ. Now the remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that the greater your sins are, the more you stand in need of a Saviour; the greater your burden is, the more you stand in need of one to help to bear it: the deeper the wound is, the more need there is of the Surgeon; the more dangerous the disease is, the more need there is of the Physician. Who but mad men will argue thus; my burden is great, there-I'le not call out for help; my wound is Mad Logic. deep, therefore I'll not call out for balm; my disease is dangerous, therefore I'll not go to the Physician. Ah! 'tis spiritua●●adnesse; 'tis the Devil's Logic to argue thus: My sins are great, therefore I'll not go to Christ; I dare not rest nor lean on Christ, etc. whereas the soul should reason thus; the greater my sins are, the more I stand in need of mercy, of pardon, and therefore I will go to Christ, who delights Mica. 7. 18. in mercy, who pardons sin for his own name sake; who is as able and as Isa. 43. 25. willing to forgive pounds, as pence, thousands, as hundreds. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to consider, that the promise of grace and mercy is to returning souls: and therefore though thou art never so wicked, yet if thou wilt return, God will be thine, mercy shall be thine, & pardon thine, etc. 2 Chron. 30. 9 For if you turn again 2 Chron. 30. 9 unto the Lord, your brethren, and your children shall find compassion before them that lead them captive, so that they shall come again into this land; for the Lord your God is gracious and merciful, and will not turn away his face from you, if ye return unto him. So Jer. 3. 12. Go, and proclaim Jer. 3. 12. these words towards the North, and say, return thou back-sliding Israel, saith the Lord, and I will not cause my anger to fall upon you; for I am merciful saith the Lord, and I will not keep ang 〈…〉 for ever. So Joel 2. 13. And rend you●●●rts, and not joel 2. 13. your garments, and turn unto the Lord your God, for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness, and repenteth him of the evil. So Isa. 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his ways, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon; or as the Hebrew read● it, he will multiply pardons. So Ezek. Ezek. ch. 18. Chap. 18. Ah sinner! 'tis not thy great transgressions that shall exclude thee from mercy; if thou wilt break off thy sins by repentance, and return to the fountain of mercy. Christ's heart, Christ's arms are wide open to embrace the returning Prodigal. 'Tis not simply the greatest of thy sins, but thy peremptory persisting in sin that will be thy eternal overthrow. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the greatest sinners have obtained mercy, and therefore all the Angels in heaven, all the men on earth, and all the Devils in hell, cannot tell to the contrary, but that thou mayest obtain mercy. Manasseh was a notorious sinner, 2 King. Chap. 21. he erected Altars for Baal, he worshipped and served all the host of Heaven; He caused his sons to pass through the fire; he gave himself to witchcraft and sorcery; he made Judah to sin more wickedly than the heathen did, whom the Lord destroyed before the children of Israel; he The Hebrew Doctors writ that he slew Isaiah the Prophet, who was his father in law. caused the streets of Jerusalem to run down with innocent blood, etc. Ah! what a devil incarnate was he in his actings; and yet when he humbled himself, and sought the Lord, the Lord was entreated of him, and heard his supplication, and brought him to Jerusalem, and made himself known unto him, and crowned him with mercy and loving kindness, as you may see in 2 Chron. 2 Chron. chap. 33. chap. 33. So Paul was once a blasphemer, a persecutor, and injurious, yet he obtained 1 Tim. 1. 13. mercy. So Mary Magdalen was a Luke 7. notorious strumpet, a common whore, one out of whom Christ cast seven Devils, yet she is pardoned by Christ, and dearly beloved of Christ, Luke 7. So Mar. 16. 9 in Mar. 16. v. 9 Now when Jesus was risen early, the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had cast seven Devils. Jansenius on the place saith, 'tis very observable that our Saviour after his resurrection first appeared to Mary Magdalen, and Peter, that had been grievous sinners; that even the worst of sinners may be comforted and encouraged to come to Christ, to believe in Christ, to rest and stay their souls upon Christ for mercy here, and glory hereafter; that is a very precious word for the worst of sinners, to hang upon Psal. 68 v. 18. The Psal. 68 18. Psalmist speaking of Christ, saith, Thou hast ascended on high, thou hast led captivity captive, thou hast received gifts for men, yea for the rebellious also, that the Lord God might dwell among them. What though thou art a rebellious child, or a rebellious servant? what though thou art a rebellious swearer, a rebellious drunkard, a rebellious Sabbath-breaker, etc. yet Christ hath received gifts for thee, even for the rebellious. He hath received the gift of pardon, the gift of righteousness; yea all the gifts of the spirit for thee, that thy heart may be made a delightful house for God to dwell in. Bodin hath a story concerning a great Rebel that had made a great strong party against a Roman Emperor; the Emperor makes Proclamation, that could bring the Rebel dead or alive, he should have such a great sum of money; The Rebel hearing of this, comes and presents himself before the Emperor, and demands the sum of money; now saith the Emperor, if I should put him to death, the world would say, I did it to save my money, and so he pardons the Rebel, and gives him the money. Ah sinners! shall a Heathen do this, that had but a drop of mercy and compassion in him? and will not Christ do much more, Coloss. 1. 19 Chap. 2, 3, 4. that hath all fullness of grace, mercy, and glory in himself? Surely his bowels do yearn towards the worst of Rebels. Ah! if you will but come in, you will find him ready to pardon, yea one Nehem. 9 17. Heb. but thou a god of pardons. made up of pardoning mercy: Oh! the readiness and willingness of Jesus Christ to receive to favour the greatest Rebels. The father of mercies did meet, embrace, and kiss that prodigal mouth which came from feeding with swine, and kissing of Harlots. Ephraim had Hos. 4. 17. 5. 3. 6. 8. 11, 12. 12. 14. 13. 12. vide. committed Idolatry, and was backsliden from God; he was guilty of lukewarmness and unbelief, etc. yet saith God, Ephraim is my dear son, he is a Jer. 31. 20. pleasant child, my bowels are troubled for him; I will have mercy (or rather as 'tis in the Original, I will have mercy, mercy) upon him saith the Lord. Well saith God, Though Ephraim be guilty of crimson sins, yet he is a son, a dear son, a precious son, a pleasant child: Though he be black with filth, and red with guilt, yet my bowels are troubled for him, I will have mercy, mercy upon him. Ah sinners! if these bowels of mercy do not melt, win, and draw you, Justice will be a swift witness against you, and make you lie down in eternal misery, for kicking against the bowels of mercy. Christ hangs out still, as once that warlike Seythian did, a white flag of grace and mercy to returning sinners that humble themselves at his feet for favour; but if sinners stand out, Christ will put forth his red flag, his bloody flag, and then they shall die for ever by a hand of Justice. Sinners, there is no way to avoid perishing by Christ's iron rod, but by kissing his golden Sceptre. The fourth Remedy against this Device 4 Remedy. of Satan i●, to consider, that jesus Christ has no where in all the Scripture excepted against the worst of sinners that are willing to receive him, to belive in him, and to rest upon him, for happiness, and blessedness: Ah sinners! why should you be more cruel and unmerciful to your own souls, than Christ is. Christ hath not excluded you from mercy, why should you exclude your own souls from mercy? Oh that you would dwell often upon that choice Scripture, John 6. 37. All john 6. 37. that the Father giveth me, shall come to me, and him that cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out (or as the Original hath it) I will not cast out. Well saith Christ, if any man will come, or is coming to me, let him be more sinful, or less; more unworthy, or less; let him be never so guilty, never so filthy, never so rebellious, never so leprous, etc. yet if he will but come, I will not, not, not cast him off. So much is held forth in that 1 Cor. 6. 9, 10, 11. Know ye not that the unrighteous 1 Cor! 6. 9 10, 11. shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? Be not deceived: Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind. Nor thiefs, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the Kingdom of God. And such were some of you: but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the spirit of our God. Ah sinners! do not think that he that hath received such notorious sinners to mercy, will reject you; He is Heb. 13. 8. yesterday, and to day, and the same for ever. Christ was borne in an Inn, to show that he receives all comers; his garments were divided into four parts, to show, that out of what part of the world soever we come, we shall be received; If we be naked, Christ hath Robes to clothe us; if we be harbourless, Christ hath room to lodge us. That is a choice Scripture, Acts 10. 34, 35. Acts 10. 34, 35. Then Peter opened his mouth, and said, of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons. But in every Nation, he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him. The three Tongues that were written upon the Cross in Greek, Latin, and Hebrew, to witness Christ to be john 19 19, 20. the King of the Jews, do each of them in their several Idiom avouch this singular Axiom, that Christ is an all sufficient Saviour, and a threefold cord is not easily broken. The Apostle puts this out of doubt in that Heb. 7. v. 25. Heb. 7. 25. Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost, that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them. Now he were not an all-sufficient Saviour, if he were not as able to save the greatest, as the least of sinners. Ah sinners, tell Jesus Christ that he hath not excluded you from mercy, and therefore you are resolved that you will sit, wait, weep, and knock at the door of mercy, till he shall say, souls be of good cheer, your sins are forgiven, your persons are justified, and your souls shall be saved. The fifth Remedy against this Device 5 Remedy. of Satan, is, to consider, that the greater sinner thou art, the dearer thou wil● be to Christ, when he shall behold thee as the travel of his soul. Isa 53. 11. Isa. 53. 11. He shall see of the travel of his soul, and be satisfied. The dearer we pay for any thing, the dearer that thing is to us; Christ hath paid most, and prayed most, and sighed most, and wept most, and bled most for the greatest sinners, and therefore they are dearer to Christ than others that are less sinful. Rachel was Gen. 29. 30. dearer to Jacob then Leah, because she cost him more; he obeyed, endured, and suffered more by day and by night for her, then for Leah. Ah sinners! the greatness of your sins does but set off the freeness and riches of Christ's grace, and the freeness of his love, this maketh Heaven and Earth to ring of his praise, that he loves those that are most unlovely; that he shows most favour to them that hath sinned most highly against him, as might be showed by several instances in Scripture, as Paul, Mary Magdalene, and others, who sinned more against Christ then these? and who had sweeter, and choicer manifestations of divine love and favour then these? The sixth Remedy against this Device 6 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the longer you keep off from Christ, the greater and stronger your sins will grow. All divine power and strength against sin flows from the souls union Rom. 8. 10. 1 john 1. 6, 7. and communion with Christ; while you keep off from Christ, you keep off from that strength and power which is only able to make you trample down strength, lead captivity captive, and slay the Goliahs that bids defiance to Christ. 'Tis only faith in Christ that makes a 1 john 5. 4. man triumph over sin, Satan, Hell, and the world. 'Tis only faith in Christ Mar. 5. 25-35. that binds the strong man hand and foot; that stops the issue of blood; that makes a man strong in resisting, and happy in conquering. Sin always dies most, where faith lives most; the most believing soul, is the most mortified soul. Ah sinner! remember this, there is no way on earth, effectually to be rid of the guilt, filth, and power of sin, but by believing in a Saviour. 'Tis not resolving, 'tis not complaining, 'tis not mourning, but believing that will make thee divinely victorious over that body of sin that to this day is too strong for thee, and that will certainly be thy ruin, if it be not ruined by a hand of faith. The seventh Remedy against this Device 7 Remedy. of Satan's, is, wisely to consider, that as there is nothing in Christ to discourage the greatest sinners from believing in him, so there is every thing in Christ that may encourage the greatest sinners to believe in him, to rest and lean upon him for all happiness, and blessedness: If you look upon his nature, his disposition, his names, his titles, his offices, as King, Priest, and Cant. 1. 3. Prophet, you shall find nothing to discourage the greatest sinners to receive Coloss. 1. 19 Chap. 2. 3. Cant. 5. 10. him, to believe on him. Christ is the greatest good, the choicest good, the chiefest good, the most suitable good, the most necessary good; he is a pure good, a real good, a total good, an eternal good, and a soul-satisfying good. Sinners, are you poor? Christ Rev. 3. 17▪ 18. hath gold to enrich you; are you naked? Christ hath royal robes, he hath white raiment to you; are you blind? Christ hath eyesalve to enlighten you; are you hungry? Christ will be Manna to feed you; are you thirsty? john 6. 48. john 7. 38. he will be a Well of living water to refresh you; are you wounded? he hath balm under his wings to heal you; are Mal. 4. 2. Mat. 4. 23. Mat. 20. 28. you sick? he is a Physician to cure you; are you prisoners? he hath laid down a ran some for you. Ah sinners! tell me, tell me, is there any thing in Christ to keep you off from believing? No, is there not every thing in Christ that may encourage you to believe in him? Yes: O then believe in him, and then though your sins be as scarlet, they be as Isa. 1. 18. white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool. Nay then your iniquities shall be forgotten, as well as Isa. 43. 25. Isa. 38. 17. Micha 1. 19 forgiven, they shall be remembered no more; God will cast them behind his back, he will hurl them into the bottom of the Sea. The 8. and last Remedy against this 8 Remedy. Device of Satan is, seriously to consider the absolute necessity of believing in Christ. Heaven is too holy, and too hot to hold unbelievers, their lodging is prepared in hell Revel. 21. 8. But Revel. 21. 8. the fear full and unbelieving, etc. shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire & brimstone, which is the second death. If ye believe not that I am he (saith Christ) john 8. 24. you shall die in your sins: And he that dies in his sins, must to judgement, and to hell in his sins. Every unbeliever is a condemned man: He that believeth not (saith John) is condemned already, because john 3. 18. he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten son of God. And he that Vers. 36. believeth not the Son, shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him. Ah sinners! the Law, the Gospel, and your own Consciences has passed the sentence of condemnation upon you, and there is no way to reverse the sentence but by believing in Christ; and therefore my counsel is this: Stir up your Isa. 64. 7. selves to lay hold on the Lord Jesus, and look up to him, and wait on him from whom every good and perfect James 1. 17. Isa. 62. 7. gift comes, and give him no rest till he hath given thee that Jewel Faith, that is more worth than Heaven and Earth; and that will make thee happy in life, joyful in death, and glorious in the day of Christ. And thus much for the Remedies against this first Device of Satan's, whereby he keeps off thousands from believing in Christ. The second Device that Satan hath to keep poor sinners from believing, from closing with a Saviour, is, BY suggesting to them their unworthiness. 2 Device. Ah saith Satan! as thou art worthy of the greatest misery, so thou art unworthy of the least crumb of mercy; what, dost thou think saith Satan, that ever Christ will own, receive, or embrace such an unworthy wretch as thou art? no, no, if there were any worthiness in thee, then indeed Christ might be willing to be entertained by thee; thou art unworthy to entertain Christ into thy house, how much more unworthy art thou to entertain Christ into thy heart, etc. Now the Remedies against this device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that God hath no where in the Scripture required any worthiness in the creature before believing in Christ. If you make a diligent search through all the Scripture, you shall not find from john 5. 29. the first line in Genesis, to the last line in the Revelation, one word that speaks Mat. 19 8. out Gods requiring any worthiness in the creature before the souls believing in Christ, before the souls leaning and resting upon Christ for happiness, and blessedness; and why then should that be a bar and hindrance to thy faith, which God doth no where require of thee before thou comest to Christ, that thou mayst have life. Ah sinners! remember Satan objects your unworthiness against you, only out of a Design to keep Christ and your souls asunder for ever; and therefore in the face of all your unworthiness rest upon Christ, come to Christ, believe in john 6. 40. 47. Christ, and you are happy for ever. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan's is, wisely to consider, that none never received Christ, embraced Christ, obtained mercy and pardon from Christ, but unworthy souls. Pray what worthiness was in Matthew, Zacheus, Mary Magdalen, Manasseh, Paul and Sydia, before their coming to Christ? before their faith in Christ? surely none. Ah sinners! you should reason thus, Christ hath bestowed the choicest mercies, the greatest favours, the highest dignities, the sweetest privileges upon unworthy sinners; and therefore O our souls do not you faint, do not you despair, but patiently and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord; who can tell but that free grace and mercy may shine forth upon us, though we are unworthy, and give us a portion among those Worthies that are now triumphing in Heaven. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan's is, that if the soul will keep off from Christ till it be worthy, it will never close with Christ, it will never embrace Christ, 'twill never be one with Christ, it must lie down in everlasting Isa. 50. ult. sorrow. God hath laid up all worthiness in Christ, that the creature may know where to find it, and may make out after it. There is no way on earth to make unworthy souls worthy, but by believing in Christ: Believing in Christ, of slaves, 'twill make 〈◊〉 1. 12. you worthy sons; of enemies, 'twill James 2. 23. make you worthy friends, etc. God will count none worthy, nor call none worthy, nor carry it towards none as worthy but Believers, who are made Reuel. 3. 4. worthy by the worthiness of Christ's person, righteousness, satisfaction, and intercession, etc. The fourth and last Remedy against 4 Remedy. this Device of Satan's is, solemnly to consider, that if you make a diligent search into your own hearts, you shall find that 'tis the pride & folly of your own hearts that puts you upon bringing of a worthiness to Christ. Oh you would feign bring something to Christ that might render you acceptable to him, you are loft to come empty handed. The Lord cries out, Ho Isa 55. 1, 2. every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath no money: come ye, buy, and eat, come buy wine and milk without money, and without price. Wherefore do you spend your money upon Verse 2. that which is not bread? and your labour for that which satisfieth not? Here the Lord calls upon money less souls, upon penniless souls, upon unworthy souls, to come and partake of his precious favours freely: but sinners are proud and foolish, and because they have no money, no worthiness to bring, they'll not come, though he sweetly invites them. Ah sinners! what is more just than that you should perish for ever, that prefer husks among swine before the milk and wine, the sweet and precious things of the Gospel that are freely and sweetly offered to you, etc. Well sinners, remember this; 'tis not so much the sense of thy unworthiness, as thy pride that keeps thee off from a blessed closing with the Lord Jesus. The third Device that Satan hath to keep poor sinners from believing in Christ, from closing with Christ, from resting on Christ, etc. is, BY suggesting to them the want of 3 Device. such and such preparations, and qualifications: saith Satan, thou art not prepared to entertain Christ; thou art not thus and thus humbled and justified; thou art not heartsick of sin▪ thou hast not been under horrors and terrors as such and such, thou must stay till thou art prepared, and qualified to receive the Lord Jesus, etc. Now the remedies against this Device of Satan are these that follow. THe first Remedy against this Device 1 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that such as have not been so and so prepared and qualified, as Satan suggests have received Christ, believed in Christ, and being saved by Christ. Matthew Mat. 9 9 was called, sitting at the receipt of custom, and there was such power went along with Christ's call, that made him to follow. We read not of any horrors or terrors, etc. that he was under before his being called by Christ. Pray what preparations and qualifications were found in Zacheus, Paul, the Luke 19 9 Acts 16. chap. Jailor, and Lydia, before their conversion. God brings in some by the sweet and still voice of the Gospel, and usually such that are thus brought in to Christ, are the sweetest, humblest, 〈◊〉 isest, and fruitfullest Christians. God is a free agent to work by Law or Gospel; by smiles or frowns; by presenting hell or heaven to sinners souls God thunders from Mount-Sinai upon some souls, & conquers them by thundering God speaks to others in a still voice, and by that conquers them. You that are brought to Christ by the Law, do not you judge and condemn them that are brought to Christ by the Rom. 14. Gospel: and you that are brought to Christ by the Gospel, do not you despise those that are brought to Christ by the Law. Some are brought to Christ by fire, storms, and tempests, others by more easy and gentle gales of the Spirit. The Spirit is free in the works of john 3. 8. conversion, and as the wind, it blows when, where, & how it pleases. Thrice happy are those souls that are brought to Christ, whether it be in a winter's night, or in a summer's day. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, solemnly to dwell upon these following Scriptures which do clearly evidence, that poor sinners which are not so and so prepared, and qualified to meet with Christ, to receive and embrace the Lord Jesus Christ, may notwithstanding that believe in Christ, and rest and lean upon him for happiness and blessedness, according to the Gospel. Read the first of the Proverbs, from vers. 20. to the end, and the 11. first verses of the 8. of the Proverbs, and the six first verses of the 9 of the Proverbs, and the 14. first verses of Ezek. chap. 16. and the 3. of John 14, 15, 16, 17, 18. 36. verses, and the 3. of the Revelations, vers. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20. Here the Lord Jesus Christ stands knocking at the Laodiceans door, he would feign have them to sup with him, and that he might sup with them; that is, that they might have intimate communion and fellowship one with another. Now pray tell me, what preparations or qualifications had these Laodiceans to entertain Christ? surely none; for they were lukewarm, they were neither cold nor hot; they were wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked; and yet Christ to show his free grace, and his condescending love, invites the very worst of sinners to open to him, though they were no ways so or so prepared or qualified to entertain him, etc. The third Remedy against this Device 3 Remedy. of Satan, is, seriously to consider, that the Lord does not in all the Scripture require such and such preparations Rom. 4. 5. God justifies the ungodly. & qualifications before men come to Christ, before they believe in Christ, or entertain, or embrace the Lord Jesus Christ. Believing, believing in Christ is the great thing that God presses upon sinners throughout the Scripture, as all know, that know any thing of Scripture. Obj. But does not Christ say, Come Mat. 11. 28. unto me all ye that labour, and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest? To this I shall give these three Answers. 1. That though the invitation be to such that labour and are heavy laden, yet the promise of giving rest, it's made over to coming to believing. 2. I answer, that all that this Scripture proves and shows, is, that such as labour under sin as under a heavy burden, Math. 11. 28. opened and cleared. and that are laden with the guilt of sin, and sense of God's displeasure, aught to come to Christ for rest; but it doth not prove that only such must come to Christ, nor that all men must be thus burdened, and laden with the sense of their sins, and the wrath of God before they come to Christ. Poor sinners, when they are under the sense of sin, and wrath of God, they are prone to run from creature to creature, and from duty to duty, and from Ordinance to Ordinance, to find rest; and if they could find it in any thing, or creature, Christ should never hear of them. But here the Lord sweetly invites them, and to encourage them, he engages himself to give them rest. Come (saith Christ) and I will give you rest. I'll not show you rest, nor barely tell you of rest, but I will give you rest. I am faithfulness itself, and cannot lie, I will give you rest. I that have the greatest power to give it, the greatest will to give it, the greatest right to give it, come laden sinners, and I will give you rest. Rest is the most good, the most suitable good, & to you the greatest good. Come saith Christ, that is, Believe in me & I will give you rest. I will give you peace with God, and peace with conscience, I will turn your storm into an everlasting calm: I will give you such rest, that the world can neither give to you, nor take from you. 3. I answer, no one Scripture speaks out the whole mind of Christ; therefore do but compare this one Scripture with those several Scriptures that are laid down in the second Remedy last mentioned, and it will clearly appear, that though men are not thus and thus burdened and laden with their sins, and filled with horror and terror, if they may come to Christ, they may receive and embrace the Lord Jesus Christ. The 4. and last Remedy against this 4 Remedy. Device of Satan is, to consider, that all that trouble for him, all that sorrow, shame, and mourning, etc. which is acceptable to God, and delightful to God, & prevalent with God, flows from faith in Christ, as the stream doth from the fountain, as the branch doth from the root, as the effect doth from the cause. Zech. 12. 10. They shall look on Zach. 12. 10. him whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn for him. All Gospel-mourning Rom. 14. 23. flows from believing; they shall first look, and then mourn. All that know any thing, knows this, that what ever is not of faith is sin. Till men have faith in Christ, their best services are but glorious sins. The fourth Device that Satan hath to keep Christ & a sinner asunder, to keep a poor sinner from believing in Christ, from embracing of Christ, etc. is, BY suggesting to the sinner Christ's 4 Device. unwillingness to save; 'tis true, saith Satan; Christ is able to save thee, but is he willing surely? though he be able, yet he is not willing to save such a wretch as thou art, that hast trampled his blood under thy feet, and that hast been in open rebellion against him all thy daye●, etc. The Remedy against this Device of Satan's is briefly to consider these few things. 1. THe great journey that he hath 1 Remedy. taken from heaven to earth, on purpose to save sinners, doth strongly demonstrate his willingness to save them. Math. 9 13. I came not to call the Mat. 9 13. righteous, but sinners to repentance. 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying, and worthy 1 Tim. 1. 15. of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief. 2. His divesting himself of his glory in order to sinner's salvation, speaks out his willingness to save them; he leaves his Father's bosom, he puts off his glorious robes, and lays aside his glorious Crown, and bids adieu to his glistering Courtiers the Angels, and all this he doth, that he may accomplish sinner's salvation. 3. That sea of sin, that sea of wrath, that sea of trouble, that sea of blood From the Cradle to the Cross, his whole life was a life of sufferings. that Jesus Christ waded through, that sinners might be pardoned, justified, reconciled, and saved, doth strongly evidence his willingness to save sinners. 4. His sending his Ambassadors early and late to woo and entreat sinners 2 Cor. 5. 19, 20. to be reconciled to him, doth with open mouth show his readiness, and willingness to save sinners. 5. His complaints against such as refuse him, and that turn their backs upon him, and that will not be saved by him, doth strongly declare his willingness to save them. He came to his own, 1 John 11. and his own received him not. So in that 5. of John, v. 40. But ye will not come john 5. 40. to me, that ye may have life. 6. The joy and delight that he takes at the conversion of sinners, doth demonstrate his willingness, that they should be saved. Luk. 15. 7. I say unto Luke 15. 7. you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons which need no repentance. God the Father rejoiceth at the return of his prodigal Son. Christ rejoices to see the travel of Isa. 53. 11. his soul: the Spirit rejoices that he hath another Temple to dwell in, and the Angels rejoice that they have another Brother to delight in, etc. The fifth Device that Satan hath to keep a sinner and Christ asunder, is, BY working a sinner to mind more 5 Device. the secret decrease and counsels of God, than his own duty. What needest thou to busy thyself about receiving, embracing, and entertaining of Christ? Saith Satan, if thou art elected, thou shalt be saved; if not, all that thou canst do will do thee no good. Nay, he will work the soul not only to doubt of its election, but to conclude that he is not elected, and therefore let him do what he can he shall never be saved. Now the Remedies against this Device of Satan are these. THe first Remedy is, seriously to consider, 1 Remedy that all the Angels in heaven, nor all the men on earth, nor all the Devils in hell cannot tell to the contrary, but that thou mayst be an elect person, a chosen vessel. Thou mayest be confident of this, that God never made Satan one of his Privy Council, God never acquainted him with the names or persons of such that he hath set his love upon to eternity, etc. The second Remedy against this Device 2 Remedy. of Satan, is, to meddle with that which thou hast to do; secret things belongs to the Lord, but revealed Deut. 29. 29. things belongs to thee; thy work sinner, is to be peremptory in believing, and in returning to the Lord; thy work is to cast thyself upon Christ, lie at his feet, to wait on him in his ways, and to give him no rest till he shall say, Sinner, I am thy portion, I am thy salvation, and nothing shall separate between thee and me. FINIS. A TABLE Showing the principal things in this Treatise. THE words opened, and the Point proved, from page 1. to page 7. In the next place is showed, the several Devices that Satan hath to draw souls to sin. Satan's first Device to draw the soul to sin, is, to present the bait, and hid the hook, etc. four Remedies against this Device, from page 7. to page 14. His second Device to draw the soul to sin, is, by painting sin with virtue's colours, 4. Remedies against this Device, from page 14. to p. 21. The third Device Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by extenuating, and lessening of sin, etc. seven Remedies against this Device of Satan, from page 21. to page 32. The fourth Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by prsenting to the soul the best men's sins, and by hiding from the soul their virtues, etc. four Remedies against this Device of Satan, from p. 32. to p. 40. The fifth Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by presenting God to the soul, as one made up all of mercy, etc. five Remedies against this Device, from pa. 40. to page 49. The sixth Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by persuading the soul, that the work of Repentance is an easy work, etc. six Remedies against this device, from page 49. to 65. The seventh Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by making the soul bold to venture upon the occasions of sin, etc. four Remedies against this Device, from p. 65. to page 73. The eighth Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by presenting to the soul the outward mercies, that vain men enjoy, and the outward miseries that they are freed from, whilst they have walked in the ways of sin, etc. Eight Remedies against this Device, from page 73. to page 87. The ninth Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by presenting to the soul the crosses, the losses, reproaches, sorrows, and sufferings that daily attend those that walk in the ways of holiness, etc. seven Remedies against this Device, from p. 87. to p. 103. The tenth Device that Satan hath to draw the souls of men to sin, is, by working them to be frequent in comparing themselves and their ways with those that are reputed to be worse than themselves, etc. three Remedies against this Device, from p. 103. to p. 107. The eleventh Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, by polluting and defiling the souls and judgements of men with such dangerous errors, that do in their proper tendency tend to carry the souls of men to all looseness, and wickedness, etc. seven Remedies against this Device, from p. 107. to p. 119. The 12. Device that Satan hath to draw the soul to sin, is, to work it to affect wicked company, etc. four Remedies against this Device, from p. 119. to p. 124. Secondly, as Satan hath his several devices to draw souls to sin, so he hath his several devices to keep souls from holy duties, to keep them off from religious services, and they are these that follow. The first Device that Satan hath to draw souls from holy duties, and to keep them off from religious services, is, by presenting the world in such a dress, and in such a garb to the soul, as to ensnare the soul, & to win upon the affections of the soul, he presents the world to them in its beauty, and bravery, which proves a bewitching sight to a world of men; Eight Remedies against this Device, from p. 124. to p. 141. The second Device that Satan hath to draw souls from the Ordinances, or holy duties, is, by presenting to them the dangers, the losses, and the sufferings that do attend the performance of such, and such religious services; five Remedies against this Device, from p. 141. to p. 152. The third Device that Satan hath to d●●w souls from holy duties, and to keep them off from Religious services, is, by presenting to the soul the difficulty of performing them, etc. five Remedies against this device from p. 152. to p. 160. The fourth Device that Satan hath to draw the soul off from holy exercises, from religious exercises, is, by working them to make false inferences, from those blessed and glorious things that Christ hath done, etc. five Remedies against this Device, from p. 160. to p. 169. The fifth Device that Satan hath to draw souls off from Religious services, and to keep souls off from holy, and heavenly performances, is, by presenting to them the paucity and poverty of those that walk in the ways of God, etc. six Romedies against this Device, from p. 169. to p. 178. The sixth Device that Satan hath to keep souls off from Religious servivices, is, by presenting before them the examples of the greatest part of the world, that walk in the ways of their own hearts, and that make light and slight of the ways of God, etc. three Remedies against this device, from pa. 178. to pa. 182. The seventh Device that Satan hath to keep souls from holy and heavenly services, is, by casting in a multitude of vain thoughts, whilst the soul is in waiting on God, etc. six Remedies against this device, from p. 182. to p. 190. The eighth Device of Satan to keep souls from holy and heavenly services, is, by working them to rest in their holy performances, etc. four remedies against this device, from p. 190. to p. 195. In the third place is showed the several Devices Satan hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, and they are these that follow, etc. The first Device that Satan hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, by causing them to poor more, and mind more their sins, than their Saviour, etc. six Remedies against this device, from p. 196. to p. 205. The second Device that Satan hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, by working them to make false definitions of their graces, etc. four Remedies against this device, from p. 205. to p. 211. The third Device that Satan hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, by working the soul to make false inferenrences, from the cross actings of Providence, etc. four Remedies against this device, from p. 211. to p. 217. The fourth Device that Satan hath to keep poor souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, by suggesting that their graces are not true, but counterfeit; two Remedies again this, and in the handling of the two Remedies, ten differences are showed betwixt renewing grace, and restraining grace, betwixt sanctifying grace, and temporary grace, from p. 217. to page 230. The fifth Device that Satan hath to keep souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, by suggesting to them, that that conflict that is in them, is not a conflict that is only in Saints, but such a conflict, that is to be found in the hearts of hypocrites, and profane souls, etc. six Remedies against this device, from page 230. to p. 238. The sixth Device that Satan hath to keep poor souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is by suggesting to the soul, that certainly the condition of the soul is not good, because the soul cannot joy and rejoice in Christ, etc. as once it could, etc. five Remedies against this device, from p. 238. to p. 244. The seventh Device that Satan hath to keep poor souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, by suggesting to the soul it's often Relapses into the same sin, which formerly he hath pursued with particular sorrow, grief, shame, and tears, and prayed, and resolved against; six Remedies against this device, from p. 244. to p. 253. The eighth Device that Satan hath to keep poor souls in a sad, doubting, and questioning condition, is, by persuading them, that their estate is not good, their hearts are not upright, their graces are not sound, because they are so followed, vexed, and tormented with temptations; several Remedies against this device, from p. 253. to p. 264. In the fourth place is showed the several ways and devices that Satan hath to destroy all sorts, and ranks of men in the world. First, he hath his Devices to destroy the great and honourable of the earth; And that First, by working them to make it their business to seek how to greaten themselves, to enrich themselves, to secure themselves, etc. six Remedies against this device, from p. 264. to p. 277. The second grand Device that Satan hath to destroy the great, and honourable of the earth, is, by engaging them against the people of the most high; four Remedies against this device, from p. 277. to p. 284. Secondly, Satan hath his Devices to destroy the learned, and the wise, & that sometimes, by working them to pride themselves in their parts, and abilities; and sometimes by drawing them to rest upon their parts and abilities; and sometimes by working them to make light and slight of those that want iheir parts and abilities, though they excel them in grace and holiness, etc. four Remedies against this device, from p. 284. to p. 290. Thirdly, Satan hath his Devices to ensnare and destroy the Saints, and that by working them, first to be strange, & then to be bitter, & jealous, and then to divide, etc. twelve remedies against this device, from p. 290. to p. 311. Fourthly, Satan hath his Devices to destroy poor ignorant souls, and that sometimes, by drawing them to affect ignorance, & to neglect, slight, and despise the means of Knowledge, etc. Four Remedies against this device, from p. 311. to p. 316. To prevent some objections, six Propositions, or Conclusions concerning Satan, & his devices are laid down, from p. 316. to page 327. Five Reasons of the Point are laid down, from p. 327. to p. 330. Several sweet and profitable Uses of the Point, from p. 330. to p. 347. To this second Impression is added an Appendix touching five more several Devices that Satan hath to keep poor souls from believing in Christ, from receiving of Christ, from embracing of Christ, from resting, leaning, or relying upon Christ for everlasting happiness, and blessedness, according to the Gospel, & Remedies against those Devices, from page 349. to the end of the Book. Imprimatur, Joseph caryl. A Catalogue of the Names of several Books printed, and to be sold by john Hancocke in Popes-head Alley. A Book of Shortwriting, the most easy, exact, and speedy Method, by Theophilus Medcalf, with a Schoolmaster to explain it. Another Book of Shorthand, written by Thomas Cross. You may buy Shelton, or any other sort of him also. A Copie-booke teaching to write several hands. A Treatise of Christ's personal reign on earth 1000 years, written by Mr. Robert Maton, showing the manner and beginning of his Reign. Also another Treatise of Christ's personal Reign, by Mr. Farmer. The Covenant of God's free Grace unfolded, by that worthy Minister Mr. John Cotton of New Engl. A description of the State of Great Britain, written 1100. years since, by that famous Author Gildas treating of its Situation, Disobedience, Subjection, Religion, etc. Spiritual intervals, or the Souls Exercise in Meditations on several Occasions, written by Lancelot Reynolds. State's Policy, written by Robert Sprye, setting forth Rules of Civil Government. Satan's Stratagems, or the Devil's cabinet-councel discovered: Showing an easy way to end Controversies in matters of Religion; written by Jacobus Accontius, translated into English, 1648. Recreations for ingenuous Headpieces, containing several witty Poems, Epigrams, Epitaphs, etc. 1650. The famous History of Edward the fourth, King of England, written by William Babington, Esq; A Treatise of Church-government approved by many godly and learned Ministers, 1644. A Glass for the Times, confuting divers Errors in Religion briefly. A Sermon before the Parliament, 1645. by Samuel Gibson, called The ruin of the Authors and fomenters of Civil War. Cases considered, and resolved, touching Baptism of Infants, and the Lords Supper, wherein all godly conscientious Ministers in England, whether congregational, or Presbyterial, are concerned; by Mr. Brookes, 1653. A Sermon preached by Mr. Brooks at the Funeral of the renowned Colonel Reinsborough, called, The glorious day of the Saints appearance, calling for a glorious Conversation, etc. 1648. A Sermon preached by Mr. Brooks at Christ-Church, at the Funeral of Mrs. Martha Randol, 1651. Entitled, A Believers last day is his best day. Two other Sermons preached by Mr. Brooks before the Parliament, one in Decemb. 6. 1648. the other in Septemb. 3. 1650. both printed by their order, but not to be had now. All the former Books mentioned, you may have of John Hancock in Popes-head Alley. Christian Reader, be pleased to pass by of course, some mistakes in pointing, and some lesser literal faults, & to correct with thy pen grosser Erratas before thou readst the Book, as being occasioned by the Author's absence from the Press.